Sculpting Rupture-Free Nuclear Shapes in Fibrous Environments

Aniket Jana, Avery Tran, Amritpal Gill, Alexander Kiepas, Rakesh K. Kapania, Konstantinos Konstantopoulos, Amrinder S. Nain

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Cytoskeleton-mediated force transmission regulates nucleus morphology. How nuclei shaping occurs in fibrous in vivo environments remains poorly understood. Here suspended nanofiber networks of precisely tunable (nm–µm) diameters are used to quantify nucleus plasticity in fibrous environments mimicking the natural extracellular matrix. Contrary to the apical cap over the nucleus in cells on 2-dimensional surfaces, the cytoskeleton of cells on fibers displays a uniform actin network caging the nucleus. The role of contractility-driven caging in sculpting nuclear shapes is investigated as cells spread on aligned single fibers, doublets, and multiple fibers of varying diameters. Cell contractility increases with fiber diameter due to increased focal adhesion clustering and density of actin stress fibers, which correlates with increased mechanosensitive transcription factor Yes-associated protein (YAP) translocation to the nucleus. Unexpectedly, large- and small-diameter fiber combinations lead to teardrop-shaped nuclei due to stress fiber anisotropy across the cell. As cells spread on fibers, diameter-dependent nuclear envelope invaginations that run the nucleus's length are formed at fiber contact sites. The sharpest invaginations enriched with heterochromatin clustering and sites of DNA repair are insufficient to trigger nucleus rupture. Overall, the authors quantitate the previously unknown sculpting and adaptability of nuclei to fibrous environments with pathophysiological implications.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number2203011
JournalAdvanced Science
Volume9
Issue number25
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 5 2022
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • cell forces
  • cell spreading
  • cell-cytoskeleton
  • extracellular matrices
  • nanofibers
  • nucleus shapes
  • yes-associated protein/TAZ

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Engineering
  • General Physics and Astronomy
  • General Chemical Engineering
  • General Materials Science
  • Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous)
  • Medicine (miscellaneous)

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