Accurate animal cell division requires precise coordination of changes in the structure of the microtubule-based spindle and the actin-based cell cortex. Here, we use a series of perturbation experiments to dissect the relative roles of actin, cortical mechanics, and cell shape in spindle formation. We find that, whereas the actin cortex is largely dispensable for rounding and timely mitotic progression in isolated cells, it is needed to drive rounding to enable unperturbed spindle morphogenesis under conditions of confinement. Using different methods to limit mitotic cell height, we show that a failure to round up causes defects in spindle assembly, pole splitting, and a delay in mitotic progression. These defects can be rescued by increasing microtubule lengths and therefore appear to be a direct consequence of the limited reach of mitotic centrosome-nucleated microtubules. These findings help to explain why most animal cells round up as they enter mitosis.
TrackMate is an automated tracking software used to analyze bioimages and is distributed as a Fiji plugin. Here we introduce a new version of TrackMate. TrackMate 7 is built to address the broad spectrum of modern challenges researchers face by integrating state-of-the-art segmentation algorithms into tracking pipelines. We illustrate qualitatively and quantitatively that these new capabilities function effectively across a wide range of bio-imaging experiments. Main textIn biosciences, object tracking is an essential image analysis technique used to quantify dynamic processes. In Life Sciences, tracking is used, for instance, to follow single particles, subcellular organelles, bacteria, cells, and whole animals. While tech developments have drastically improved image acquisition capabilities and allowed increasingly sophisticated experimental setups, they have also led to bottlenecks in downstream image analyses. Due to the sheer diversity of images, no single software can address every Life Science research tracking challenge. This has prompted the development of flexible and extensible software tracking platforms 1-5 , including TrackMate, that enable biologists to build automated tracking pipelines tailored to a specific problem.
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