Active Liquid Crystal Theory Explains the Collective Organization of Microtubules in Human Mitotic Spindles

Abstract

How thousands of microtubules and molecular motors self-organize into spindles remains poorly understood. By combining static, nanometer-resolution, large-scale electron tomography reconstructions and dynamic, optical-resolution, polarized light microscopy, we test an active liquid crystal continuum model of mitotic spindles in human tissue culture cells. The predictions of this coarse-grained theory quantitatively agree with the experimentally measured spindle morphology and fluctuation spectra. These findings argue that local interactions and polymerization produce collective alignment, diffusive-like motion, and polar transport which govern the behaviors of the spindle's microtubule network, and provide a means to measure the spindle's material properties. This work demonstrates that a coarse-grained theory featuring measurable, physically-interpretable parameters can quantitatively describe the mechanical behavior and self-organization of human mitotic spindles.

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