TY - JOUR
T1 - Optimal strategies for correcting merotelic chromosome attachments in anaphase
AU - Kliuchnikov, Evgenii
AU - Marx, Kenneth A.
AU - Barsegov, Valeri
AU - Mogilner, Alex
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2025 the Author(s).
PY - 2025/2/4
Y1 - 2025/2/4
N2 - Accurate chromosome segregation in mitosis depends on proper connections of sister chromatids, through microtubules, to the opposite poles of the early mitotic spindle. Transiently, many inaccurate connections are formed and rapidly corrected throughout the mitotic stages, but a small number of merotelic connections, in which a chromatid is connected to both spindle poles, remain lagging at the spindle’s equator in anaphase. Most of the lagging chromatids are eventually moved to one or the other pole, likely by a combination of microtubules’ turnover and the brute force of pulling by the microtubules’ majority from the one pole against the microtubules’ minority from the other pole. We use computer simulations from two stochastic models (1D and full 3D CellDynaMo model) combining force balances and microtubules’ dynamics for the lagging chromatids to investigate what maximizes the percentage of segregated laggards. We find that a) brute force tug-of-war with slow (< 0.0001 s−1) microtubules’ detachment rate can move asymmetric laggards to the poles in limited time, b) rapid (> 0.01 s−1) microtubules’ detachment rate leads to a significant loss of the laggards, and c) intermediate (~ 0.001 s−1) microtubules’ detachment rate ensures higher than 90% accuracy of segregation. The simulations also shed light on the waiting time required to correct the merotelic errors in anaphase and on the roles of chromatid-attached microtubule number and Aurora B–mediated, spatially graded regulation of microtubule kinetics in anaphase.
AB - Accurate chromosome segregation in mitosis depends on proper connections of sister chromatids, through microtubules, to the opposite poles of the early mitotic spindle. Transiently, many inaccurate connections are formed and rapidly corrected throughout the mitotic stages, but a small number of merotelic connections, in which a chromatid is connected to both spindle poles, remain lagging at the spindle’s equator in anaphase. Most of the lagging chromatids are eventually moved to one or the other pole, likely by a combination of microtubules’ turnover and the brute force of pulling by the microtubules’ majority from the one pole against the microtubules’ minority from the other pole. We use computer simulations from two stochastic models (1D and full 3D CellDynaMo model) combining force balances and microtubules’ dynamics for the lagging chromatids to investigate what maximizes the percentage of segregated laggards. We find that a) brute force tug-of-war with slow (< 0.0001 s−1) microtubules’ detachment rate can move asymmetric laggards to the poles in limited time, b) rapid (> 0.01 s−1) microtubules’ detachment rate leads to a significant loss of the laggards, and c) intermediate (~ 0.001 s−1) microtubules’ detachment rate ensures higher than 90% accuracy of segregation. The simulations also shed light on the waiting time required to correct the merotelic errors in anaphase and on the roles of chromatid-attached microtubule number and Aurora B–mediated, spatially graded regulation of microtubule kinetics in anaphase.
KW - 3D computational modeling
KW - anaphase
KW - merotelic errors
KW - tug-of-war
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U2 - 10.1073/pnas.2416459122
DO - 10.1073/pnas.2416459122
M3 - Article
C2 - 39883838
AN - SCOPUS:85217028961
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 122
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
IS - 5
M1 - e2416459122
ER -