4.5 Article

Engineering metaphase spindles: Construction site and building blocks

Journal

CURRENT OPINION IN CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 79, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

CURRENT BIOLOGY LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ceb.2022.102143

Keywords

Spindle; Mitotic; Meiotic; Tubulin; Microtubule; Active cytoplasm; Tubulin isoforms; Tubulin PTMs; Mass density; Macromolecular crowding; Viscoelasticity

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The article discusses the complexity of spindle construction in eukaryotic cells, as well as the dynamic interactions between spindles and the cytoplasm, emphasizing the importance of understanding microtubules and molecular collective behavior and their connection to the entire cellular environment.
In an active, crowded cytoplasm, eukaryotic cells construct metaphase spindles from conserved building blocks to segregate chromosomes. Yet, spindles execute their function in a stunning variety of cell shapes and sizes across orders of magnitude. Thus, the current challenge is to understand how unique mesoscale spindle characteristics emerge from the interaction of molecular collectives. Key components of these collectives are tubulin dimers, which polymerise into microtubules. Despite all conservation, tubulin is a genetically and biochemically complex protein family, and we only begin to uncover how tubulin diversity affects microtubule dynamics and thus spindle assembly. Moreover, it is increasingly appreciated that spindles are dynamically intertwined with the cytoplasm that itself exhibits cell-type specific emergent properties with yet mostly unexplored consequences for spindle construction. Therefore, on our way toward a quantitative picture of spindle function, we need to understand molecular behaviour of the building blocks and connect it to the entire cellular context.

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