Actin cross-linking organizes basal body patterning through anomalous diffusion transitions
Raghavan Thiagarajan, Younes Farhangi Barooji, Poul-Martin Bendix, Mandar M. Inamdar, Jakub Sedzinski

TL;DR
This study reveals how actin cross-linking influences basal body dynamics and patterning in multiciliated cells, transitioning from diffusive to confined motion to ensure proper cilia organization.
Contribution
It demonstrates that actin cross-linking modulates basal body movement regimes, crucial for establishing uniform cilia patterning in developing Xenopus embryos.
Findings
Discovered transitions between diffusive and anomalous motion of basal bodies.
Showed actin cross-linking constrains basal body movement and promotes uniform spacing.
Disruption of actin cross-linking impairs basal body patterning and cilia alignment.
Abstract
Subcellular protein complexes and organelles exhibit diverse dynamic behaviors that reflect the mechanical constraints and organization of the intracellular environment. Although some structures follow classical Brownian motion, many display anomalous dynamics. The transitions between these regimes are increasingly recognized as critical for subcellular organization, yet how they influence pattern formation remains unclear. Here, we investigate the spatial arrangement of cilia on the apical surface of multiciliated cells (MCCs) in developing Xenopus laevis embryos, where coordinated ciliary beating depends on the precise organization of hundreds of centriole-derived basal bodies (BBs). Using quantitative confocal, high-resolution and high-speed TIRF imaging together with theoretical modeling, we show that BB trajectories undergo time-resolved transitions between diffusive and anomalous…
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