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Interphase cell morphology defines the mode, symmetry, and outcome of mitosis

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Interphase cell morphology defines the mode, symmetry, and outcome of mitosis. / Nogare, Damian; Pena, Andreia; Herbert, Shane et al.
In: Science, Vol. 388, No. 6746, 01.05.2025.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Nogare, D, Pena, A, Herbert, S, Costa, G, Hulmes, G, CA, F, Jones, GW, Appleton, E, Lovegrove, H, Giralt-Pujol, M, Bentley, K, Ghadaouia, S, Linker, C, Manning, C, Alhashem, Z, Revell, C, Chitnis, A, Ballestrem, C & Mort, RL 2025, 'Interphase cell morphology defines the mode, symmetry, and outcome of mitosis', Science, vol. 388, no. 6746. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adu9628

APA

Nogare, D., Pena, A., Herbert, S., Costa, G., Hulmes, G., CA, F., Jones, G. W., Appleton, E., Lovegrove, H., Giralt-Pujol, M., Bentley, K., Ghadaouia, S., Linker, C., Manning, C., Alhashem, Z., Revell, C., Chitnis, A., Ballestrem, C., & Mort, R. L. (2025). Interphase cell morphology defines the mode, symmetry, and outcome of mitosis. Science, 388(6746). https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adu9628

Vancouver

Nogare D, Pena A, Herbert S, Costa G, Hulmes G, CA F et al. Interphase cell morphology defines the mode, symmetry, and outcome of mitosis. Science. 2025 May 1;388(6746). doi: 10.1126/science.adu9628

Author

Nogare, Damian ; Pena, Andreia ; Herbert, Shane et al. / Interphase cell morphology defines the mode, symmetry, and outcome of mitosis. In: Science. 2025 ; Vol. 388, No. 6746.

Bibtex

@article{eaa082602e6f4de7a7d55af1bdaf35c9,
title = "Interphase cell morphology defines the mode, symmetry, and outcome of mitosis",
abstract = "INTRODUCTIONTissue formation requires the concerted coordination of diverse cellular processes. For example, the major shifts in cell shape that define tissue architecture frequently occur concomitant with the asymmetric cell divisions that generate tissue heterogeneity. Tight spatiotemporal coupling of distinct morphogenetic events is thus critical to achieving robust tissue assembly.RATIONALEIn addition to sculpting tissue form, cell shape remodeling also plays a fundamental role in the control of cell division. Upon mitotic entry, metazoan cells typically adopt a spherical shape following global reorganization of the interphase cytoskeleton. This mitotic rounding both promotes high-fidelity segregation of genetic material and generation of equally sized daughters that symmetrically partition most nongenetic cellular components. Thus, modulation of mitotic rounding would represent an elegant means to switch cells from a symmetric to asymmetric division outcome. However, whether cells have the capacity to tune the extent of their mitotic rounding and how this would influence mitotic symmetry and/or daughter identity remains unclear. Moreover, whether prior shifts in interphase cell morphology have any impact on the extent of mitotic shape remodeling or symmetry of division remains unexplored. We hypothesized that, if shifts in interphase cell morphology can indeed affect mitotic shape remodeling, this could explain the close coupling of morphogenetic shape change with the switches in the symmetry of division observed during tissue building.RESULTSTo investigate the codependence of interphase and mitotic cell shape dynamics, we exploited single-cell morphometric analyses of tissue formation in multiple contexts, including blood vessel and neural crest development. These analyses revealed that stereotyped shifts in pre-mitotic cell morphology act as conserved instructive cues that tune the mode, symmetry, and outcome of mitosis. We identified that distinct shifts in mesenchymal-like cell morphology switch cells to an {"}isomorphic” mode of division, which uncharacteristically evades mitotic rounding and preserves pre-mitotic cell morphology throughout division. Using a combination of micropatterning tools and in vivo live imaging, we revealed that preservation of asymmetries in interphase cell morphology during division also resulted in the maintenance of asymmetric distributions of key signaling factors. Specifically, we found that during isomorphic divisions, Rab4-positive recycling endosomes and their fate-determinant cargo were asymmetrically inherited, thereby generating daughters of differing identities.CONCLUSIONThese observations uncovered dynamic modulation of the extent of mitotic rounding as a previously unknown trigger for asymmetric cell division. In contrast to the current view, this data suggests that mitotic cell rounding is far from a universal feature of mesenchymal-like cell division and is often elegantly tuned by pre-mitotic cell morphology. Moreover, we identified that cells exploit this phenomenon to functionally couple shifts in interphase shape to the induction of distinct daughter cell identities and behaviours, thereby directing tissue assembly. Thus, morphogenetic cell shape change not only sculpts tissue form but concomitantly generates the cellular diversity underpinning tissue building. Considering that most mesenchymal-like cells exhibit equivalent shape dynamics during tissue remodeling, including metastatic cancer cells, instructive cues encoded in interphase morphology are likely an underappreciated and conserved modulator of mitotic symmetry and cell state heterogeneity in diverse tissue contexts.",
author = "Damian Nogare and Andreia Pena and Shane Herbert and Guilherme Costa and Georgia Hulmes and Franco CA and Jones, {Gareth Wyn} and Ellen Appleton and Holly Lovegrove and Marta Giralt-Pujol and Katie Bentley and Sabrina Ghadaouia and Claudia Linker and Cerys Manning and Zain Alhashem and Christopher Revell and Ajay Chitnis and Christoph Ballestrem and Mort, {R. L.}",
year = "2025",
month = may,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1126/science.adu9628",
language = "English",
volume = "388",
journal = "Science",
issn = "0036-8075",
publisher = "American Association for the Advancement of Science",
number = "6746",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Interphase cell morphology defines the mode, symmetry, and outcome of mitosis

AU - Nogare, Damian

AU - Pena, Andreia

AU - Herbert, Shane

AU - Costa, Guilherme

AU - Hulmes, Georgia

AU - CA, Franco

AU - Jones, Gareth Wyn

AU - Appleton, Ellen

AU - Lovegrove, Holly

AU - Giralt-Pujol, Marta

AU - Bentley, Katie

AU - Ghadaouia, Sabrina

AU - Linker, Claudia

AU - Manning, Cerys

AU - Alhashem, Zain

AU - Revell, Christopher

AU - Chitnis, Ajay

AU - Ballestrem, Christoph

AU - Mort, R. L.

PY - 2025/5/1

Y1 - 2025/5/1

N2 - INTRODUCTIONTissue formation requires the concerted coordination of diverse cellular processes. For example, the major shifts in cell shape that define tissue architecture frequently occur concomitant with the asymmetric cell divisions that generate tissue heterogeneity. Tight spatiotemporal coupling of distinct morphogenetic events is thus critical to achieving robust tissue assembly.RATIONALEIn addition to sculpting tissue form, cell shape remodeling also plays a fundamental role in the control of cell division. Upon mitotic entry, metazoan cells typically adopt a spherical shape following global reorganization of the interphase cytoskeleton. This mitotic rounding both promotes high-fidelity segregation of genetic material and generation of equally sized daughters that symmetrically partition most nongenetic cellular components. Thus, modulation of mitotic rounding would represent an elegant means to switch cells from a symmetric to asymmetric division outcome. However, whether cells have the capacity to tune the extent of their mitotic rounding and how this would influence mitotic symmetry and/or daughter identity remains unclear. Moreover, whether prior shifts in interphase cell morphology have any impact on the extent of mitotic shape remodeling or symmetry of division remains unexplored. We hypothesized that, if shifts in interphase cell morphology can indeed affect mitotic shape remodeling, this could explain the close coupling of morphogenetic shape change with the switches in the symmetry of division observed during tissue building.RESULTSTo investigate the codependence of interphase and mitotic cell shape dynamics, we exploited single-cell morphometric analyses of tissue formation in multiple contexts, including blood vessel and neural crest development. These analyses revealed that stereotyped shifts in pre-mitotic cell morphology act as conserved instructive cues that tune the mode, symmetry, and outcome of mitosis. We identified that distinct shifts in mesenchymal-like cell morphology switch cells to an "isomorphic” mode of division, which uncharacteristically evades mitotic rounding and preserves pre-mitotic cell morphology throughout division. Using a combination of micropatterning tools and in vivo live imaging, we revealed that preservation of asymmetries in interphase cell morphology during division also resulted in the maintenance of asymmetric distributions of key signaling factors. Specifically, we found that during isomorphic divisions, Rab4-positive recycling endosomes and their fate-determinant cargo were asymmetrically inherited, thereby generating daughters of differing identities.CONCLUSIONThese observations uncovered dynamic modulation of the extent of mitotic rounding as a previously unknown trigger for asymmetric cell division. In contrast to the current view, this data suggests that mitotic cell rounding is far from a universal feature of mesenchymal-like cell division and is often elegantly tuned by pre-mitotic cell morphology. Moreover, we identified that cells exploit this phenomenon to functionally couple shifts in interphase shape to the induction of distinct daughter cell identities and behaviours, thereby directing tissue assembly. Thus, morphogenetic cell shape change not only sculpts tissue form but concomitantly generates the cellular diversity underpinning tissue building. Considering that most mesenchymal-like cells exhibit equivalent shape dynamics during tissue remodeling, including metastatic cancer cells, instructive cues encoded in interphase morphology are likely an underappreciated and conserved modulator of mitotic symmetry and cell state heterogeneity in diverse tissue contexts.

AB - INTRODUCTIONTissue formation requires the concerted coordination of diverse cellular processes. For example, the major shifts in cell shape that define tissue architecture frequently occur concomitant with the asymmetric cell divisions that generate tissue heterogeneity. Tight spatiotemporal coupling of distinct morphogenetic events is thus critical to achieving robust tissue assembly.RATIONALEIn addition to sculpting tissue form, cell shape remodeling also plays a fundamental role in the control of cell division. Upon mitotic entry, metazoan cells typically adopt a spherical shape following global reorganization of the interphase cytoskeleton. This mitotic rounding both promotes high-fidelity segregation of genetic material and generation of equally sized daughters that symmetrically partition most nongenetic cellular components. Thus, modulation of mitotic rounding would represent an elegant means to switch cells from a symmetric to asymmetric division outcome. However, whether cells have the capacity to tune the extent of their mitotic rounding and how this would influence mitotic symmetry and/or daughter identity remains unclear. Moreover, whether prior shifts in interphase cell morphology have any impact on the extent of mitotic shape remodeling or symmetry of division remains unexplored. We hypothesized that, if shifts in interphase cell morphology can indeed affect mitotic shape remodeling, this could explain the close coupling of morphogenetic shape change with the switches in the symmetry of division observed during tissue building.RESULTSTo investigate the codependence of interphase and mitotic cell shape dynamics, we exploited single-cell morphometric analyses of tissue formation in multiple contexts, including blood vessel and neural crest development. These analyses revealed that stereotyped shifts in pre-mitotic cell morphology act as conserved instructive cues that tune the mode, symmetry, and outcome of mitosis. We identified that distinct shifts in mesenchymal-like cell morphology switch cells to an "isomorphic” mode of division, which uncharacteristically evades mitotic rounding and preserves pre-mitotic cell morphology throughout division. Using a combination of micropatterning tools and in vivo live imaging, we revealed that preservation of asymmetries in interphase cell morphology during division also resulted in the maintenance of asymmetric distributions of key signaling factors. Specifically, we found that during isomorphic divisions, Rab4-positive recycling endosomes and their fate-determinant cargo were asymmetrically inherited, thereby generating daughters of differing identities.CONCLUSIONThese observations uncovered dynamic modulation of the extent of mitotic rounding as a previously unknown trigger for asymmetric cell division. In contrast to the current view, this data suggests that mitotic cell rounding is far from a universal feature of mesenchymal-like cell division and is often elegantly tuned by pre-mitotic cell morphology. Moreover, we identified that cells exploit this phenomenon to functionally couple shifts in interphase shape to the induction of distinct daughter cell identities and behaviours, thereby directing tissue assembly. Thus, morphogenetic cell shape change not only sculpts tissue form but concomitantly generates the cellular diversity underpinning tissue building. Considering that most mesenchymal-like cells exhibit equivalent shape dynamics during tissue remodeling, including metastatic cancer cells, instructive cues encoded in interphase morphology are likely an underappreciated and conserved modulator of mitotic symmetry and cell state heterogeneity in diverse tissue contexts.

U2 - 10.1126/science.adu9628

DO - 10.1126/science.adu9628

M3 - Journal article

VL - 388

JO - Science

JF - Science

SN - 0036-8075

IS - 6746

ER -