611170 Nuclear Size Changes Caused By Local Motion of Cell Boundaries Unfold the Nuclear Lamina and Dilate Chromatin and Intranuclear Bodies

Tuesday, November 17, 2020
Food, Pharmaceutical & Bioengineering Division (15) (Poster Gallery)
Aditya Katiyar1, Vincent J. Tocco Jr.2, Yuan Li2, Varun Aggarwal3, Andrew Tamashunas2, Richard Dickinson2 and Tanmay Lele2, (1)Mechanical Engineering, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, (2)Chemical Engineering, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, (3)Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Florda, Gainesville, FL

The mechanisms by which mammalian nuclear shape and size are established in cells, and become abnormal in disease states are not understood. Here, we tracked motile cells that underwent systematic changes in cell morphology as they moved from 1-D to 2-D micro-patterned adhesive domains. Motion of the cell boundaries during cell motility caused a dynamic and systematic change in nuclear volume. Short time scales (~1 h) distinguished the dilation of the nucleus from the familiar increase that occurs during the cell cycle. Nuclear volume was systematically different between cells cultured in 3-D, 2-D and 1-D environments. Dilation of the nuclear volume was accompanied by dilation of chromatin, a decrease in the number of folds in the nuclear lamina, and an increase in nucleolar volume. Treatment of 2-D cells with non-muscle myosin-II inhibitors decreased cell volume, and proportionately caused a decrease in nuclear volume. These data suggest that nuclear size changes during cell migration may potentially impact gene expression through the modulation of intranuclear structure.

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