2025-08-26 理化学研究所

細胞キラリティを駆動するアクトミオシンリング
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アクチノミオシン細胞骨格の動的同心円パターンを介した上皮細胞のキラル性の出現 Epithelial cell chirality emerges through the dynamic concentric pattern of actomyosin cytoskeleton
Takaki Yamamoto,Tomoki Ishibashi,Yuko Mimori-Kiyosue,Sylvain Hiver,Naoko Tokushige,Mitsusuke Tarama,Masatoshi Takeichi,Tatsuo Shibata
eLife Published:Jul 8, 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.102296
Abstract
The chirality of tissues and organs is essential for their proper function and development. Tissue-level chirality derives from the chirality of individual cells that comprise the tissue, and cellular chirality is considered to emerge through the organization of chiral molecules within the cell. However, the principle of how molecular chirality leads to cellular chirality remains unresolved. To address this fundamental question, we experimentally studied the chiral behaviors of isolated epithelial cells derived from a carcinoma line and developed a theoretical understanding of how their behaviors arise from molecular-level chirality. We first found that the nucleus undergoes clockwise rotation, accompanied by robust cytoplasmic circulation in the same direction. During the rotation, actin and Myosin IIA assemble into the stress fibers with a vortex-like chiral orientation at the ventral side of the cell periphery, concurrently forming a concentric pattern at the dorsal side. Further analysis revealed that the intracellular rotation is driven by the concentric actomyosin filaments located dorsally, not by the ventral vortex-like chiral stress fibers. To elucidate how these concentric actomyosin filaments induce chiral rotation, we analyzed a theoretical model developed based on the theory of active chiral fluid. This model demonstrated that the observed cell-scale unidirectional rotation is driven by the molecular-scale chirality of actomyosin filaments even in the absence of cell-scale chiral orientational order. Our study thus provides novel mechanistic insights into how the molecular chirality is organized into the cellular chirality, representing an important step toward understanding left–right symmetry breaking in tissues and organs.
Editor’s evaluation
Although the actomyosin cytoskeleton has been shown to play an important role, the principles by which molecular chirality leads to the chirality of cells, tissues, and organs remain largely unexplored. This important study reveals that the concentric actomyosin network at the apical side of Caco-2 cells, rather than the ventral chiral stress fibers, drives the rotational movement of the nucleus and cytoplasmic flow in the same direction. The convincing data are supported by a theoretical model based on the theory of active fluids, which explains how unidirectional rotation at the cellular scale can arise from the chirality of actomyosin filaments at the molecular scale, even in the absence of chiral orientational order at the cellular scale.


