Mechanics of nuclear deformation in cells

ORAL · Invited

Abstract

The cell nucleus is commonly considered to be a stiff organelle that mechanically resists changes in shape, and this resistance is thought to limit the ability of cells to migrate through pores or spread on surfaces. Generation of cytoskeletal stresses on the cell nucleus during migration and nuclear response to these stresses is fundamental to cell migration and mechano-transduction. I will discuss our experimental and computational evidence that supports a dynamic model, in which the soft nucleus is irreversibly shaped by viscous stresses generated by the motion of cell boundaries and transmitted through the intervening cytoskeletal network. While the nucleus is commonly modeled as a stiff elastic body, we review how nuclear shape changes on the timescale of migration can be explained by simple geometric constraints of constant nuclear volume and constant surface area of the nuclear lamina. Because the lamina surface area is in excess of that of a sphere of the same volume, these constraints permit dynamic transitions between a wide range of shapes during spreading and migration. The excess surface area allows the nuclear shape changes to mirror those of the cell with little mechanical resistance. Thus, the nucleus can be easily shaped by the moving cell boundaries over a wide range of shape changes and only becomes stiff to more extreme deformations that would require the lamina to stretch or the volume to compress. This model explains how nuclei can easily flatten on surfaces during cell spreading or elongate as cells move through pores until the lamina smooths out and becomes tense.

Publication: Mechanical principles of nuclear shaping and positioning.
Lele TP, Dickinson RB, Gundersen GG.
J Cell Biol. 2018 Oct 1;217(10):3330-3342.


Viscous shaping of the compliant cell nucleus.
Dickinson RB, Katiyar A, Dubell CR, Lele TP.
APL Bioeng. 2022 Jan 4;6(1):010901. doi: 10.1063/5.0071652.


The Nucleus Bypasses Obstacles by Deforming Like a Drop with Surface Tension Mediated by Lamin A/C.
Katiyar A, Zhang J, Antani JD, Yu Y, Scott KL, Lele PP, Reinhart-King CA, Sniadecki NJ, Roux KJ, Dickinson RB, Lele TP.
Adv Sci (Weinh). 2022 Aug;9(23):e2201248.

Presenters

  • Tanmay Lele

    Texas A&M University

Authors

  • Tanmay Lele

    Texas A&M University