PLoS Biology (Apr 2018)

Elasticity-based boosting of neuroepithelial nucleokinesis via indirect energy transfer from mother to daughter.

  • Tomoyasu Shinoda,
  • Arata Nagasaka,
  • Yasuhiro Inoue,
  • Ryo Higuchi,
  • Yoshiaki Minami,
  • Kagayaki Kato,
  • Makoto Suzuki,
  • Takefumi Kondo,
  • Takumi Kawaue,
  • Kanako Saito,
  • Naoto Ueno,
  • Yugo Fukazawa,
  • Masaharu Nagayama,
  • Takashi Miura,
  • Taiji Adachi,
  • Takaki Miyata

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.2004426
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 4
p. e2004426

Abstract

Read online

Neural progenitor cells (NPCs), which are apicobasally elongated and densely packed in the developing brain, systematically move their nuclei/somata in a cell cycle-dependent manner, called interkinetic nuclear migration (IKNM): apical during G2 and basal during G1. Although intracellular molecular mechanisms of individual IKNM have been explored, how heterogeneous IKNMs are collectively coordinated is unknown. Our quantitative cell-biological and in silico analyses revealed that tissue elasticity mechanically assists an initial step of basalward IKNM. When the soma of an M-phase progenitor cell rounds up using actomyosin within the subapical space, a microzone within 10 μm from the surface, which is compressed and elastic because of the apical surface's contractility, laterally pushes the densely neighboring processes of non-M-phase cells. The pressed processes then recoil centripetally and basally to propel the nuclei/somata of the progenitor's daughter cells. Thus, indirect neighbor-assisted transfer of mechanical energy from mother to daughter helps efficient brain development.