“…Cytoskeletal elements must be temporally and spatially coordinated for cells to carry out complex functions, including cell division and cell wound repair (Abreu-Blanco et al, 2011b; Agarwal and Zaidel-Bar, 2019; Basant and Glotzer, 2018; Bement and von Dassow, 2014; Cheffings et al, 2016; Chew et al, 2017; Chugh and Paluch, 2018; D’Avino et al, 2015; Dekraker et al, 2018; Dogterom and Koenderink, 2019; Green et al, 2012; Nakamura et al, 2018; Pollard and O’Shaughnessy, 2019; Sonnemann and Bement, 2012; Verboon and Parkhurst, 2015). MTs form a radial array pattern and associate with actin around wounds in Xenopus oocytes (Mandato and Bement, 2003), whereas MTs do not accumulate or become spatially arrayed in the Drosophila cell wound repair model (Abreu-Blanco et al, 2011a).…”