2015
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004607
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Inferring the Forces Controlling Metaphase Kinetochore Oscillations by Reverse Engineering System Dynamics

Abstract: Kinetochores are multi-protein complexes that mediate the physical coupling of sister chromatids to spindle microtubule bundles (called kinetochore (K)-fibres) from respective poles. These kinetochore-attached K-fibres generate pushing and pulling forces, which combine with polar ejection forces (PEF) and elastic inter-sister chromatin to govern chromosome movements. Classic experiments in meiotic cells using calibrated micro-needles measured an approximate stall force for a chromosome, but methods that allow … Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(44 citation statements)
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“…Recent work on spindle and MT organization includes studies of spindle elongation and force balance [59,68], the formation and maintenance of antiparallel MT overlaps [69,70], MT bundling and sliding [15], spindle movements and positioning [71,72], spindle length and shape [15,51,52,73,74], MT organization [75], and spindle assembly from a bipolar initial condition [32,76]. Models of kinetochore-MT attachment and biorientation have examined capture of lost kinetochores [63,77], chromosome reorientation after MT attachment [31], attachment error correction [33,39,78,79], and chromosome movement on the spindle [52,61,[80][81][82]. Most spindle models have started with a bipolar structure or separated spindle poles, and most previous chromosome models have begun with chromosomes attached to the spindle or near a pre-formed spindle.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent work on spindle and MT organization includes studies of spindle elongation and force balance [59,68], the formation and maintenance of antiparallel MT overlaps [69,70], MT bundling and sliding [15], spindle movements and positioning [71,72], spindle length and shape [15,51,52,73,74], MT organization [75], and spindle assembly from a bipolar initial condition [32,76]. Models of kinetochore-MT attachment and biorientation have examined capture of lost kinetochores [63,77], chromosome reorientation after MT attachment [31], attachment error correction [33,39,78,79], and chromosome movement on the spindle [52,61,[80][81][82]. Most spindle models have started with a bipolar structure or separated spindle poles, and most previous chromosome models have begun with chromosomes attached to the spindle or near a pre-formed spindle.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent work on spindle and MT organization includes studies of spindle elongation and force balance [59,68], the formation and maintenance of antiparallel MT overlaps [69,70], MT bundling and sliding [15], spindle movements and positioning [71,72], spindle length and shape [15,51,52,73,74], MT organization [75], and spindle assembly from a bipolar initial condition [32,76]. Models of kinetochore-MT attachment and biorientation have examined capture of lost kinetochores [63,77], chromosome reorientation after MT attachment [31], attachment error correction [33,39,78,79], and chromosome movement on the spindle [52,61,[80][81][82]. Most spindle models have started with a bipolar structure or separated spindle poles, and most previous chromosome models have begun with chromosomes attached to the spindle or near a pre-formed spindle.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The dynamics of centromere motion during metaphase has been the focus of many quantitative studies [13][14][15][16][17][18][19] . The development of automated centromere tracking, advanced image analysis, and datadriven mathematical modelling has provided novel mechanistic and molecular insights into metaphase centromere dynamics 20,21 . However, the dynamic behaviour of centromeres during the metaphase-toanaphase transition and during anaphase has been largely overlooked due of the lack of appropriate quantitative tools.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%