Communicative & Integrative Biology (Jan 2019)

Cell organelle-based analysis of cell chirality

  • Jie Fan,
  • Haokang Zhang,
  • Tasnif Rahman,
  • Diana N. Stanton,
  • Leo Q. Wan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/19420889.2019.1605277
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 78 – 81

Abstract

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The maintenance of tight endothelial junctions requires the establishment of proper cell polarity, which includes not only the apicobasal and front-rear polarity but also the left-right (L-R) polarity. The cell possesses an intrinsic mechanism of orienting the L-R axis with respect to the other axes, following a left-hand or right-hand rule, termed cell chirality. We have previously reported that endothelial cells exhibit a clockwise or rightward bias on ring-shaped micropatterns. Now we further characterize the chirality of individual endothelial cells on micropatterns by analyzing the L-R positioning of the cell centroid relative to the nucleus-centrosome axis. Our results show that the centroids of endothelial cells preferably polarized towards the right side of the nucleus-centrosome axis. This bias is consistent with cell chirality characterized by other methods. These results suggest that the positioning of cell organelles is intrinsically L-R biased inside individual cells. This L-R bias provides an opportunity for determining cell chirality in situ, even in vivo, without the limitations of using isolated cells in in vitro engineered platforms.

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