Skip to main content

Spindles and active vortices in a model of confined filament-motor mixtures

Abstract

Background

Robust self-organization of subcellular structures is a key principle governing the dynamics and evolution of cellular life. In fission yeast cells undergoing division, the mitotic spindle spontaneously emerges from the interaction of microtubules, motor proteins and the confining cell walls, and asters and vortices have been observed to self-assemble in quasi-two dimensional microtubule-kinesin assays. There is no clear microscopic picture of the role of the active motors driving this pattern formation, and the relevance of continuum modeling to filament-scale structures remains uncertain.

Results

Here we present results of numerical simulations of a discrete filament-motor protein model confined to a pressurised cylindrical box. Stable spindles, nematic configurations, asters and high-density semi-asters spontaneously emerge, the latter pair having also been observed in cytosol confined within emulsion droplets. State diagrams are presented delineating each stationary state as the pressure, motor speed and motor density are varied. We further highlight a parameter regime where vortices form exhibiting collective rotation of all filaments, but have a finite life-time before contracting to a semi-aster. Quantifying the distribution of life-times suggests this contraction is a Poisson process. Equivalent systems with fixed volume exhibit persistent vortices with stochastic switching in the direction of rotation, with switching times obeying similar statistics to contraction times in pressurised systems. Furthermore, we show that increasing the detachment rate of motors from filament plus-ends can both destroy vortices and turn some asters into vortices.

Conclusions

We have shown that discrete filament-motor protein models provide new insights into the stationary and dynamical behavior of active gels and subcellular structures, because many phenomena occur on the length-scale of single filaments. Based on our findings, we argue the need for a deeper understanding of the microscopic activities underpinning macroscopic self-organization in active gels and urge further experiments to help bridge these lengths.

1 Background

Filamentous proteins are prevalent within eukaryotic cells and perform a variety of crucial tasks relating to cellular integrity, locomotion, transport and division [1, 2]. Such tasks are often active in that they can only proceed in concert with energy-consuming mechanisms, including directed filament growth and motor protein-generated tension, placing such processes outside the realm of equilibrium thermodynamics [3]. Self-organisation of motor protein-filament mixtures will be selected for when it robustly reproduces static or dynamic structures beneficial to the cell's viability. An example is the mitotic spindle that forms during division of fission yeast cells. It has been shown that this bipolar structure, consisting of microtubules emanating from spindle pole bodies towards an overlapping midplane region, exists and functions essentially as normal even in cells with no nucleus-associated microtubule organizing center [4, 5]. The plausible conclusion is that the interaction between filaments and motor proteins in the confined cell geometry controls the location of the pole bodies. For budding yeast this self-organisation scenario has been reinforced by the evolution of more sophisticated regulatory mechanisms [6]. Also, egg cell extracts from the amphibious genus Xenopus can generate a well-formed spindle apparatus despite entirely lacking cell walls [79]. Nonetheless an understanding of the principles underlying self-organization of bioflaments driven by motor proteins in confined spaces is of direct relevance to many organisms [10].

Given the complexity of real cells it is often advantageous to consider simplified model systems, and this approach has been adopted to investigate the role of confinement in filament-motor mixtures. Experiments on growing microtubules confined to spherical emulsion droplets revealed a droplet-size dependency on the observed structure [11]: Droplets larger than ≈ 29 μm in diameter contained asters with the polar microtubules pointing towards the centre, controlled by the motor protein dynein, whereas smaller droplets were found to contain semi-asters with the aster's focus near the interface. These findings demonstrate that the degree of confinement can partly determine structure formation, but as motor density and speed were not control variables in these experiments their influence could not be assayed.

A strikingly non-equilibrium property of filament-motor mixtures is their ability to spon-taneously generate flows due to their active components, even in the absence of boundary driving forces [1214]. Assays of microtubule-oligomeric kinesin mixtures in a quasi-two dimensional geometry with flat, parallel confining walls found a dynamic rotating structure denoted a vortex [15, 16]. Accompanying simulations of semiflexible filaments [16] and subsequent hydrodynamic theories [17, 18] appeared to reproduce the observed structures. However, as discussed in Ref. [19], it is unlikely that the simulations of Surrey et al. [16] and the theories and simulations of Ref. [17, 18] describe the same type of vortex, because the hydrodynamic theories are based on a nematic order-parameter description, while simulations of semi-flexible filaments in Ref. [16] neglect self-avoidance (and thus nematic order). Mesoscopic models based on the Smoluchowski equations have not resolved this issue [20, 21]. Simulations of self-avoiding filaments strictly in two dimensions showed no evidence of a vortex state [19]. The microscopic picture underlying vortex formation thus remains unknown. Gliding assays of filaments along motor beds permit quantitative comparison to models [9, 22] and at high concentration exhibit vortex-like 'swirls' [23, 24], although in this situation the active forces are unbalanced monopoles, unlike dipoles generated by motors connecting two filaments in the bulk [25]. Vortex-like motion is often observed in self-propelled systems such as bacterial swimmers [2628], but with differing microscopic mechanisms.

It is apparent that the combined influence of confinement and activity on structure formation and spontaneous flows in filament-motor mixtures is presently not well understood. Our aim here is to acquire a deeper understanding of this problem in a broad sense, not restricted to any one biological realisation, i.e. microtubule-dynein or actin-myosin. It is therefore desirable to study model systems in which all parameters can be freely varied. The application of continuum equations, which are coarsegrained over lengths much larger than the filament length L, to structures of only a few L in spatial extent is not guaranteed to be successful. We therefore adopt a discrete numerical model in which motors and filament segments are explicitly represented, and all physical mechanisms that are potentially relevant (steric hinderance, thermal fluctuations etc.) are incorporated. This model is an extension of one previously employed in two dimensions [19], where it was found to produce some signatures of active gels such as super-diffusion and anomalous small wavelength density fluctuations, but not vortices.

We consider arrays of filaments confined to a quasi- two dimensional cylinder, with a height of a few filament diameters which permits filament overlap, and an external pressure at the curved walls. We then systematically vary the motor density, speed and applied pressure. Four steady-state configurations arise within the covered parameter space, including an aster and semi-aster as observed in confined emulsion droplets [11], and also a spindle-like state that spontaneously emerges from the motor-filament interaction in the confined geometry, possibly reproducing the fission yeast observations [4, 5]. These states are described in Sec. 3.1 along with a fourth nematic state that links to known equilibrium phases. We also find a fifth, vortex state associated with a definite rotation of filaments about a fixed center that appears to be always transient. The existence and properties of these vortices are characterised in Sec. 3.2. To highlight the important role played by motors at filament plus-ends, we independently vary the detachment rate of motors from plus-ends in Sec. 3.3 and show that vorticity is associated with a critical fraction of plus-ended motors. The observation of vortices in fixed volume systems described in Sec. 3.4 confirm that they are driven at least partly by motor motion and not boundary fluctuations, and in Sec. 4 we discuss possible future directions.

2 Methods

We consider a system of N semiflexible polar filaments, which can be connected by motor proteins. Each filament consists of M = 30 monomers separated by a bond length b with Hookean bond potentials with a spring constant 100 kBT/b2. Self-avoidance of filaments is introduced by repulsive Lennard-Jones potentials with diameter σ and energy parameter ε = 5 kBT. A natural choice is σ = b. Semi-flexibility is described by curvature elasticity with bending rigidity κ = 200 bkBT such that the persistence length ℓ p = κ/k B T is ℓ p = 20L/3 with L = Mb the filament length.

Only motors simultaneously connected to two different filaments are explicitly represented. The concentration of free motors in solution is assumed to be spatiotemporally uniform, which is a valid assumption for rapidly-diffusing free motors when the ratio of attached to free motors is small. This concentration is renormalized into a constant rate of attachment as discussed below. Motors are modeled as two-headed Hookean springs with a spring constant kBT/b2 and dynamics defined by four rates as shown in Figure 1(a): (i) The attachment rate kA for a motor to attach to two monomers within a predefined range, here taken to be the excluded volume radius 21/6σ (so kA is the product of a molecular attachment rate and the free motor concentration); (ii) the detachment rate kD of each head independently from its filament (detachment of either head results in removal of the whole motor from the system); (iii) the movement rate kM of each head independently towards the filament's [+]-end, and (iv) the detachment rate kE for motor heads already at a [+] end. The movement rate is attenuated by an exponential factor e - Δ E k B T with ΔE the change in motor spring energy for the trial move. Except where otherwise stated, kE = kD below.

Figure 1
figure 1

Model definition. (a) Summary of key model parameters including the rates of motor attachment kA and detachment kD, and the bare stepping rate kM. See text for details. (b) Plan view showing the filaments oriented with their light-shaded [+]-ends towards the center. The arrows denote the external pressure acting on the circular elastic wall. (c) Side view of the same, showing the confining walls perpendicular to the z-axis.

Simulating 3D filament gels in a spherical or cubic box at physiologically-relevant densities is computationally prohibitive when excluded volume interactions are included. To reduce computational demands while still permitting filament overlap, we therefore adopt a quasi-2D simulation cell with parallel confining walls normal to the z-axis spaced 5b L apart; see Figures 1(b) and 1(c). This is a similar geometry to the microtubule experiments [15, 16]. Furthermore we only consider a single ring of filaments driven by an inward-acting pressure, intended to describe confinement in a cell, or other filaments nearby. This external pressure acts through a flexible, elastic wall as evident from Figures 1(b) and 1(c) and described in detail below.

All walls repel the monomers with the same Lennard-Jones non-bonding potential as for filaments. N = 175 filaments are placed in a radial aster configuration with all [+]-ends pointing towards the center, in three parallel layers with roughly 66-68 filaments per layer (note there is some stochasticity in the initial conditions). This initial condition was chosen to promote the formation of asters and vortices, but does not inhibit other structures as described below. The system is surrounded by an elastic wall, which initially is circular with radius 40b. The wall is discretized into 80 nodes that are initially regularly spaced. Changes in node separation from the initial value ℓ0 to ℓ0 + δℓ incur an energy cost 1 2 k B TZδ 2 0 - 3 per adjacent node pair, with Z = 5b the wall height. Similarly, changes in the local curvature between adjacent node triplets from the initial value κ0 to κ0 + δκ incur an energy 103kBTℓ0Zδκ2 per triplet. The chosen coefficients ensure an approximately circular wall shape throughout the deformation without significantly countering the external pressure for typical filament densities, as confirmed by the far smaller final wall radii measured when the filaments were absent.

The filaments, motors and elastic wall are all updated stochastically. The filaments obey Brownian dynamics [29] governed by an effective monomer friction coefficient γ for hydrodynamically anisotropic slender elements, i.e. with a 2:1 ratio between implicit solvent drag perpendicular to the filament axis (= 2γ) to the parallel direction (= γ) [30]. Wall nodes move by Monte Carlo Metropolis moves applied to the (x, y) coordinates of 80 nodes initially equispaced along its contour. The energy for these moves includes the wall elastic and wall-filament interaction energies, and a pressure-volume term PV where P > 0 is a fixed parameter for each run. To check for convergence with time, various scalar quantities, such as the number of motors per filament, were checked to be constant within noise when plotted against log(t). In addition, the mean squared rotation ( Δ θ ) 2 ( t , t + Δ t ) = N - 1 i = 1 N | θ i ( t + Δ t ) - θ i ( t ) | 2 , with θ i the angle between filament i's centre-of-mass with respect to the nominal centre of the box (more precisely, the mean of all wall nodes) and some fixed axis, was checked to no longer to vary with t to within noise. Stationarity was not achieved for the vortex states, for which alternative measures were employed as described in Sec. 3.2.

3 Results

Results are presented here in terms of the normalised attachment rate kA/kD, the normalised motor rate kMτ b where τ b = Lbγ/4kBT is the approximate time for a filament to freely diffuse one monomer distance; the normalised pressure P/P0 with P0 = ε/b3 with ε = 5 kBT the Lennard-Jones repulsion energy, and, where relevant, the scaled end-detach rate kE/kD.

3.1 Stationary states

For the parameter space considered, we observe four classes of steady-state configuration as shown in Figure 2. For a low density of fast motors, spindles are observed as in Figure 2(a), which crossover to a radially-symmetric aster as the motor density is increased as show in Figure 2(b). For slower motors, we observe a nematic at low motor densities and semi-asters at high motor densities, as shown in Figures 2(c) and 2(d) resp. Semi-asters typically arise for higher pressures than asters and are more compressed, consistent with the emulsion experiments of Pinot et al. [11] and justifying our use of the term. Movies demonstrating the spontaneous emergence of all of these states from the initial conditions for exactly the same parameters are available as Additional File 1 (spindle, corresponding to Figure 2(a)), Additional File 2 (aster, corresponding to Figure 2(b)), Additional File 3 (nematic, corresponding to Figure 2(c)) and Additional File 4 (semi-aster, corresponding to Figure 2(d)).

Figure 2
figure 2

Snapshots of steady-states. Snapshots of steady-states for a low motor attachment rate kA/kD = 1 (left) and a higher rate kA/kD = 30 (right). Conversely, the top line is for fast motors kMτ b = 3.75 × 10-2 and the bottom line for motors 10 times slower. Filaments are shaded light (dark) towards their plus (minus) ends, respectively. These states are referred to as (a) spindle, (b) aster, (c) nematic and (d) semi-aster. The other parameters are P/P0 = 0.03 and kE = kD. Movies of the same parameter values are available from the supplementary information.

To quantify to which state a system belongs, each filament's polarity vector is projected onto the x-y plane to give a two-dimensional unit vector aligned towards the [+]-end. This is averaged over all filaments whose centers of mass have azimuthal angle θ with respect to the center of the system, giving rise to the mean orientation p ^ ( θ ) . This is then decomposed into angular mode vectors a m and b m ,

p ^ ( θ ) = 1 2 π a 0 + 1 π m = 1 { a m cos m θ + b m sin m θ } ,
(1)

from which can be defined the mode amplitudes Q m ,

(2)

The Q m are invariant under global rotations of the whole box.

To determine the corresponding state, the measured Qm up to m = 3 are compared to known values for ideal states, and that with the closest Euclidean distance is taken to be the state. The values for pure asters and nematic phases are easy to derive; for an aster p ^ ( θ ) = ( - cos θ , - sin θ ) , (Q0, Q1, Q2, Q3) = (0,1,0,0), whereas for the nematic state where p ^ ( θ ) = ( 0 , 0 ) , (Q0, Q1, Q2, Q3) = (0,0,0,0). Note that while an isotropic state would give the same Qm as for the nematic, such states only arise for kA and P well below the considered ranges. For spindles and semi-aster states there is a degree of choice in how the target Qm are calculated, so we choose simple forms that permit exact evaluation of the Q m . For the spindle, p ^ ( θ ) = ( - cos θ , sin θ ) for θ (-π/4, π/4) or θ (3π/4, 5π/4) and zero otherwise, for which (Q0, Q1, Q2, Q3) = (0, 2/π2 + 1/2, 0, 2/π2). For the semi-aster, p ^ ( θ ) = ( - cos [ θ 3 ] , - sin [ θ 3 ] ) for θ (-3π/4, 3π/4) and zero otherwise, for which (Q0,Q1,Q2,Q3) = (9/π2, 9/4π2, 333/1715π2, 9/100π2). Variations in these forms have been tested and although the boundaries between states shift slightly, the underlying trends remain the same.

The occurrence of the four steady-states, plus a fifth 'vortex' state to be discussed below, with motor density and speed are presented in Figure 3 for two different pressures. The observed configurations correlate with the density and distribution of motors along the filaments. The mean number of motors per filament nmot/N is plotted in Figure 4 and shows an expected increase with the attachment rate kA as well as the pressure. The increase with pressure can be understood as due to the closer packing of the filaments, increasing the number of potential attachment points for motors and hence nmot. The approximate scaling n mot ~ k A 3 2 is faster than the linear relationship measured for constant volume, two-dimensional simulations [19], presumably due to similar reasons: As kA increases so does the motor density which, in this constant-pressure ensemble, allows the system to contract, presenting more potential attachment points between monomers and hence further increasing the motor density. A derivation of the value 3/2 of the exponent is not available so far.

Figure 3
figure 3

State diagrams. Variation of steady-state with motor density and speed for (a) P/P0 = 0.01 and (b) P/P0 = 0.024. Markers denote actual states determined as described in the text and the boundaries are equidistant between pairs of data points. The vortex region in (b) is a transient configuration that is explained in section 3.2 and is delineated as those states with a vorticity V exceeding 0.7. Since it eventually contracts to a semi-aster, the two distinct semi-aster regions in (b) become contiguous in steady-state.

Figure 4
figure 4

Motor density. No. of motors per filament versus attachment rate kA/kD for the motor speeds and external pressure denoted in the legend. The thick black dashed line has a slope of 3/2. Where data for the required P was not available, nmot was interpolated from runs with P slightly higher and lower than the target value.

Motors move to the [+]-end and dwell there until detaching, thus a greater fraction are expected to occupy filament [+]-ends, potentially resulting in tight binding mediated via many motors. Plotted in Figure 5 is the fraction of motors with at least one head at a filament's [+]-end, n mot [ + ] n mot , for the same runs as in Figure 4. By comparing to the configuration plots in Figure 3 it is possible to infer signatures of crossovers between states in the inflection points in these curves. For the slower motors, there is an increase in n mot [ + ] n mot as the nematic state changes to a state with a greater degree of polar ordering (spindle or semi-aster depending on the pressure). For the faster motors there is a marked increase in n mot [ + ] n mot with kA, which corresponds to the crossover to the aster state with a high degree of [+]-end binding. Further indication of the importance of [+]-end binding is presented in section 3.3 where enhanced end-unbinding rates kE > k D are considered.

Figure 5
figure 5

Plus-end motors. Fraction of motors with at least one head at a filament's [+]-end versus kA/kD for the same data as in Figure 4, so the top two lines correspond to fast motors and the bottom to slow motors.

3.2 Dynamics and vortices

The stationary states described above admit no spontaneous non-equilibrium flows, despite the motor motion generating a positive energy flux: The increase in the stored motor elastic energy due to motor motion and thermal drift of the connected filaments is balanced by the loss due to detachment, with no observed net translocation or rotation of the filaments in steady-state. Collective rotation of all filaments about a fixed center arises for one region of the considered parameter ranges, but appears to be a transient flow that irreversibly contracts to a non-rotating semi-aster configuration. These states are referred to here as vortices due to their superficial similarity with the rotational modes observed in microtubule-kinesin assays [15, 16] and are described in detail in this section. A snapshot is given in Figure 6 and movies are provided as Additional File 5 (all filaments shown) and Additional File 6 (one filament highlighted for the same run as Additional File 5).

Figure 6
figure 6

Snapshot of a vortex. Snapshot of a vortex rotating in the anti-clockwise direction as presented, for parameters P/P0 = 0.024, kA/kD = 35 and kMτ b = 7.5 × 10-3 taken at a time t/τb ≈ 5.3 × 103. The colour code is the same as in Figure 2.

Collective rotation of the whole system can be quantified by the mean angular velocity of filament centre-of-mass vectors r relative to the system center, or alternatively by the net transverse velocity of each filament's centre-of-mass relative to its polarity, ( v × p ^ ) z . Here we employ the latter as it is available for all of our runs, but we have confirmed that it closely tracks the angular velocity in those runs for which both were measured. Examples of v× p ^ for 3 independent runs are given in Figure 7, and show finite rotation of either sign until the system irreversibly contracts to a semi-aster state and rotation ceases. This contraction time can be confirmed by visual observation of system states, and can be precisely located by fitting the system radius as a function of time, R(t), to the four-parameter hyperbolic tangent R(t) = Rmin + ΔR tanh[(t - tcont)/Δt]. The mean of ( v × p ^ ) z is presented in Figure 7 for each run as a horizontal line segment, that extends from t = 0 to the contraction time tcont found from this fit. In all cases, tcont coincides with the rapid decay of v× p ^ to zero, providing independent confirmation that rotation ceases when the system contracts to a semi-aster.

Figure 7
figure 7

Example of vorticity. Examples of the vorticity ( v × p ^ ) | z scaled by a characteristic velocity v for kA/kD = 35, kMτ b = 7.5 × 10-3 and P/P0 = 0.024. For clarity error bars are only given for a single run. The thick horizontal line segments denote the mean value up to the time when the vortex contracts to a semi-aster, and are plotted up to this time.

It is now possible to define a vorticity order parameter for each point in parameter space. For each run α, the mean μ a and standard deviation σ α of ( v × p ^ ) | z is calculated starting from t = 0 up to the time that the system contracts. This is regarded as significant if the mean is comparable to or larger than the standard deviation, but since the sign is arbitrary we also take the absolute value to give the vorticity for a single run,

(3)

This is then averaged over all runs with the same parameters to give the mean vorticity V = V α ¯ . A given point in parameter space is then regarded as exhibiting a (transient) vortex if V exceeds some arbitrarily-chosen value of order unity. The corresponding region of parameter space for V>0.7 is plotted in Figure 3 and arises for higher densities of motors that are not so fast that they aggregate at [+]-ends, which would stabilize an aster relative to a vortex. Independently varying the fraction of [+]-ended motors by increasing the end-detachment rate kE supports the existence of a critical fraction for vortex formation, as discussed in Sec. 3.3.

The reciprocal relationship between vorticity and contraction time is clearly evident when both quantities are plotted together; see Figure 8. Stronger vortices have a shorter lifetime than weaker vortices. The distribution of contraction times is presented in Figure 9(a) for a single pressure. As the data is noisy we do not attempt to extract an arbitrary distribution, but instead make two statistical tests for the most basic possibilities, i.e. that contraction happens at a fixed time, which would give a Gaussian distribution, or that it happens at a fixed rate corresponding to an exponential distribution. To give some measure of the goodness-of-fit, the Anderson-Darling statistics for an exponential distribution with an unknown mean has a significance level of P ≈ 0.2, whereas that for a normal distribution of unknown mean and variance has a significance level of P ≈ 0.025 [31, 32]. This clearly favours the exponential over the Gaussian distribution. Attaining even this noisy data consumed considerable computing resources and we were unable to repeat this procedure for other parameter values.

Figure 8
figure 8

Vorticity and contraction times. Contraction time to a semi-aster tcont/τ b (left axis; solid circles) and vorticity V (right axis; open squares) versus pressure P/P0 for kA/kD = 35 and kMτ b = 7.5 × 10-3. The contraction time was determined by the fit of the radius to a hyperbolic tangent, or assigned the maximum value of tcont = 1.6 × 104τ b if no contraction had occurred within this time. Each point represents 5 independent runs.

Figure 9
figure 9

Contraction time and vorticity statistics. (a) Probability distribution of contraction times on log-linear axes for P/P0 = 0.024, kA/kD = 35 and kMτb = 7.5 × 10-3. The thick line gives the best fit to an exponential distribution which has a mean ≈ 1.7 × 104, corresponding to ≈ 0.75 full rotations (the longest vortex survived for ≈ 2.6 rotations). Data corresponds to 20 independent runs. (b) Normalised probability histogram of signed vorticity for P/P0 = 0.020 (white bars in the background; 5 runs) and P/P0 = 0.024 (shaded bars in the foreground; 20 runs).

Assuming the true distribution is exponential, this would suggest that contraction is triggered by spontaneous fluctuations that occur at a constant rate in time. From observation of movies of filament arrangements, a likely candidate is the transient void formation frequently observed near the outer wall, where nearby filaments are attached purely by motors at their [+]-ends and not along their length. Such voids, when large enough, lead to a 'hinge'-like mechanism in which the void expands and one section of the polarity field inverts, leading to the semi-aster.

The onset of vorticity is also evident in the histogram of the signed vorticity, i.e. the V α before taking the modulus in eqn. (3), which can be positive or negative depending on the direction of rotation. For low pressures with V1 this distribution is unimodal around the origin, but becomes bimodal when vorticity is more evident as demonstrated in Figure 9(b). Of the 20 runs presented here, 12 rotated in one direction and 8 in the other, which has a significance interval of P ≈ 0.5 as determined from a Binomial test with equal probabilities for both directions. This is to be expected given our use of stochastic initial condition that does not predispose the system to any preferred rotational direction.

Independent confirmation of vorticity can be inferred from the mean-squared angular deviation 〈(Δθ)2〉 already defined in Sec. 2. This is plotted in Figure 10 for the same parameters as above as a function of the lag time Δt, averaged over all waiting times t up until tcont. There is a crossover from linear behavior (Δθ)2 ~ Δt for low pressures with low vorticity, to a more rapid scaling (Δθ)2 ~ (Δt)2 for pressures well into the vortex regime. Since this quantity is the angular analogue of the mean squared displacement for translation degrees of freedom, these two limits can be regarded as diffusive and ballistic, respectively. Microscopically the diffusive limit corresponds to fluctuations with no net drift, whereas the ballistic limit arises when all filaments are rotating around the system with a constant angular velocity in the same direction. Therefore the vortex state should correlate with ballistic motion, and comparison of Figures 8 and 10 confirms this. This figure also demonstrates that the integrated angular rotation of the vortex before contraction is typically larger than π/2, much larger than the diffusive drift ≈ π/10 over the same time frame.

Figure 10
figure 10

Mean-squared angular changes. Mean-squared changes in angle 〈(Δθ)2〉 versus lag time Δt for the pressures given in the legend, kA/kD = 35 and kMτb = 7.5 × 10-3. The short thick line segments have the slope given.

3.3 Enhanced detachment from ends

In the simulations that accompanied the microtubule experiments, it was claimed that the residence time at the microtubule [+]-ends played a crucial role in determining the vortex stability, with an enhanced end-detachment rate required to form vortices [16]. By contrast, for our model it is the fraction of motors at filament [+]-ends that determines vortex stability relative to an aster. The vorticity, motor density and fraction of motors at [+]-ends are plotted in Figure 11 against end-detachment rates kEkD for two sets of kA, kM and P. It is clear that increasing kE can both destroy a vortex that existed when kE = kD, and create a vortex when kE = kD gave an aster. In order of increasing kE, the sequence aster → vortex → semi-aster (where any vortex is either absent or too short lived to be discerned) is typically observed, although we do not claim this sequence is followed by all points in parameter space. There is a slight increase in motor density in the semi-aster state as evident from the figure, resulting from an increase in potential attachment points due to the increased density.

Figure 11
figure 11

Varying end-detach rates. Variation of vorticity, motor density and fraction of [+]-end motors with kE for kA/kD = 35 and kmτ b = 7.5 × 10-3 (solid lines, filled squares) and kA/kD = 60 and kMτb = 37.5 × 10-3 (dashed lines, open diamonds). P/P0 = 0.024 in both cases. The thick dashed line in the lower plot corresponds to 25%. Quantities were measured just prior to contraction, or in steady-state if there was no contraction or it happened too rapidly to discern.

Thus residence time at [+]-ends, which is k E - 1 , is not the determining factor with regards vortex stability here. Rather, vortices coincide with around 25% of motors at [+]-ends as highlighted in the figure. There is no critical dependency on the motor density, although we speculate that below some minimum value spindles or nematic states would be observed instead. The critical fraction 25% will likely depend on parameters that were not varied in this work, such as filament length M and the motor spring stiffness. A systematic survey of these parameters, or of kEkD for all kA, kM and P, is however beyond the scope of this work.

3.4 Controlled volume

One message from the previous sections is that the observed steady-state is predominately determined by the density of motors and the fraction at [+]-ends. It may appear that the primary role of motor motion, which would be the source of any non-equilibrium effects in this model, is merely to select the fraction of [+]-ended motors, faster motors giving a higher fraction. It might even be speculated that even the transient vortex state is driven, not by motor motion, but rather as a protracted buckling event powered by the pressurised walls.

It is straightforward to show that motor motion can drive vortex motion, however. Plotted in Figure 12 is the rotational velocity v × p ^ v for two independent runs in a box with fixed radius, where v is a characteristic filament velocity. The system is initially in an aster configuration, but when the radius is suddenly reduced by b/2 at a time t/τ b ≈ 1.6 × 104, the system switches to a rotating vortex state that appears to be long-lived; the total time window in this figure is an order of magnitude longer than the longest vortex described in Sec. 3.2 (which has the same parameters). Since there is no energy input from the walls, the only possible cause for this rotation is the motor motion. Thus the pressure ensemble is important to let the system adjust its density to the vortex state; however, the same pressure also destabilizes the vortex state, because it favors further contraction into the semi-aster.

Figure 12
figure 12

Fixed volume vortices. (a) Filament rotation for two independent runs at fixed volume. The imposed radius R is given in the lower panel. Snapshots for the run corresponding to the solid black line at points (b) and (c) are given in the lower figures. A short time at the initial radius R/b = 38 was required to avoid numerical instabilities.

Although the magnitude of the rotational velocity remains fixed (note that the characteristic velocity v is the same for both runs and constant in time), the direction aperiodically reverses as evident in the changes of sign in the figure. The statistics of time intervals between direction switching suggest that the underlying mechanism may be the same as for the contraction to the semi-aster state in the constant pressure case. Specifically, the mean switching time Δtswitch/τ b = 21.6 × 104 ± 5.8 × 104 is consistent with the mean contraction time ≈ 1.7 × 104 measured earlier, and again is consistent with an exponential distribution (significance level P ≈ 0.2 from n = 7 values using the Anderson-Darling test [31, 32]). This suggests that the same spontaneous fluctuation that permits contraction under constant pressure instead promotes rotational reversal under constant volume.

4 Discussion

It has been demonstrated that the vortices described here involve the collective rotation of the filaments about a fixed centre. This was predicted by the nematodynamics theory of Kruse et al. [17], but contrasts with the simulations of intersecting filaments [16] for which movies appear to show no actual filament rotation, rather the motors run along a static vortex configuration of the growing filaments. It is possible that our inclusion of excluded volume interactions, which are necessary to generate the nematic elasticity required by the theory but were absent in these earlier simulations, may explain this discrepancy. Those simulations also employed growing filaments, whereas here as in the continuum modeling these lengths were fixed, suggesting a further potential source of discrepency. Unlike the continuum theories, however, our vortices are only one filament in radius so there is no radial gradient in the polarity field, making direct comparison problematic. We conclude that the challenging task remains to demonstrate a definitive link between macroscopic vortices and microscopic filament-motor interactions. An important aspect could be the system size of the microscopic models, because a minimum size much larger than currently accessible by simulations may be needed to see vortices in a bulk system. Further experiments might elucidate the underlying mechanism. For instance, fluorescently tagging a small fraction of microtubules would allow individual filament rotation (if any) to be visualised.

The variation of steady-state structure with motor speed and density shown in Figure 3 can in large part be understood as due to a non-uniform density of motors along the filament, in particular the fraction of motors at a [+]-end which dwell there before detaching. Varying the end-detachment rate kE confirms that a strong binding at [+]-ends can stabilise an aster relative to a vortex or semi-aster. The motor speed kM plays a role in selecting the distribution of motors along the filament, but also contributes to the rotation of vortices as inferred from the fixed volume system in Sec. 3.4. Therefore we claim that the observed vortex is a genuine non-equilibrium state powered at least partially by the unidirectional motion of energy-consuming motor heads along the filaments, although at constant pressure they appear to be transient. It is not clear if varying some other parameters may produce stable vortices.

Systematically quantifying the role of all of the model parameters is clearly challenging for such a high-dimensional parameter space, and here we have adopted the pragmatic approach of holding most parameters fixed while varying those deemed most likely to be critical. Eventually the impact of all parameters on structure and dynamics will need to be quantified if a broad description of active gels is to be attained. Here, we highlight two parameters likely to reveal novel or interesting behaviour. First, the filament length L = Mb was fixed at M = 30 monomers throughout, whereas extensive simulations with M = 25 revealed similar steady-state diagrams as Figure 3 but no vortices. Increasing the aspect ratio therefore seems to enhance vorticity, and it would be interesting to quantify this effect. Secondly, the elastic parameters for the wall were set to maintain a roughly circular shape, as in the emulsion experiments of Pinot et al. [11]. However, in those experiments flexible vesicles were also considered that produced a richer array of observed structures, and this effect could be easily investigated within our model by lowering the bending stiffness of the wall.

While it was always our intention to model filament-motor systems as generally as possible, it is nonetheless insightful to consider the corresponding parameters for an actual system. Taking the filament diameter to be b = 10 nm, intermediate between microtubules (about 25 nm) and actin (about 7 nm), the filament length in our simulations becomes 0.3 μm, and the forces generated by our motors correspond to kBT/b ≈ 0.4pN. These values are smaller than but comparable to real systems, e.g. for actin-myosin complexes, filament lengths are typically around 1 μm and myosin proteins generate approximately 1.5pN [33]. Mapping our inverse movement rate k M - 1 to the typical motor cycle time of 20- 40 ms [33] suggests that our average simulation run extended to about one minute, again comparable to but shorter than typical experimental times. Vortex rotation times will also be of the order of a minute. Our findings should thus be experimentally accessible, and we predict that the steady states observed here will be reproduced if a confining geometry of size comparable to the mean filament length can be engineered in in vitro actin-myosin or microtubule-kinesin experiments. The chances of success will be increased if motor concentrations capable of generating around 10-100 or more motors per filament are chosen, and perhaps reducing the mean filament length to give aspect ratios around 30-50.

In very recent experiments on actin (without myosin) in confined geometries [34], pattern formation strikingly similar to our nematic state in Figure 2(c) was observed. Since we find such states for a low density of slow motors, this is entirely consistent with the approach to the passive systems investigated in these experiments.

5 Conclusions

We have systematically varied motor speed and density in filaments confined to a pressurised cylindrical cell, and have uncovered four qualitatively different types of steady state, namely aster, semi-aster, spindle and nematic. The corresponding regions of parameter space for each state were delineated by modal analysis of the filament polarities. Furthermore, in one region of parameter space we found a vortex state in which filaments rotated about the system centre for a finite time before buckling to a semi-aster. Quantitative analysis of rotation speed and mean-squared angular displacement provided unambiguous evidence of coherent filament rotation in this state. The vortex state persisted for far longer times with fixed walls, albeit with stochastic changes of direction, demonstrating that motors and not pressure alone are necessary for the observed vortex rotation.

References

  1. Alberts B, Johnson A, Lewis J, Raff M, Roberts K, Walter P: Molecular Biology of the Cell. Garland Science. 2007, 5

    Google Scholar 

  2. Bray D: Cell Movements: From Molecules to Motility. Garland Science. 2000, 2

    Google Scholar 

  3. Mizuno D, Tardin C, Schmidt CF, Mackintosh F: Nonequilibrium mechanics of active cytoskeletal networks. Science. 2007, 315 (5810): 370-373. 10.1126/science.1134404.

    Article  ADS  Google Scholar 

  4. Carazo-Salas RE, Nurse P: Self-organization of inter-phase microtubule arrays in fission yeast. Nature Cell Biology. 2006, 8 (10): 1102-1107. 10.1038/ncb1479.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  5. Daga RR, Lee KG, Bratman S, Salas-Pino S, Chang F: Self-organization of microtubule bundles in anu-cleate fission yeast cells. Nature Cell Biology. 2006, 8 (10): 1108-1113. 10.1038/ncb1480.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  6. Haase SB, Lew DJ: Microtubule Organization: Cell Shape Is Destiny. Current Biology. 2007, 17 (7): R249-R251. 10.1016/j.cub.2007.02.003.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  7. Verde F, Berrez J, Antony C, Karsenti E: Taxol-Induced Microtubule Asters In Mitotic Extracts Of Xenopus Eggs - Requirement For Phosphory-lated Factors And Cytoplasmic Dynein. Journal Of Cell Biology. 1991, 112 (6): 1177-1187. 10.1083/jcb.112.6.1177.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  8. Heald R, Tournebize R, Blank T, Sandaltzopoulos R, Becker P, Hyman A, Karsenti E: Self-organization of microtubules into bipolar spindles around artificial chromosomes in Xenopus egg extracts. Nature. 1996, 382: 420-10.1038/382420a0.

    Article  ADS  Google Scholar 

  9. Hentrich C, Surrey T: Microtubule organization by the antagonistic mitotic motors kinesin-5 and kinesin-14. The Journal of Cell Biology. 2010, 189 (3): 465-480. 10.1083/jcb.200910125.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  10. Terenna CR, Makushok T, Velve-Casquillas G, Baigl D, Chen Y, Bornens M, Paoletti A, Piel M, Tran PT: Physical Mechanisms Redirecting Cell Polarity and Cell Shape in Fission Yeast. Current Biology. 2008, 18 (22): 1748-1753. 10.1016/j.cub.2008.09.047.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  11. Pinot M, Chesnel F, Kubiak J, Arnal I, Nedelec F, Gueroui Z: Effects of Confinement on the Self-Organization of Microtubules and Motors. Current Biology. 2009, 19: 954-960. 10.1016/j.cub.2009.04.027.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  12. Voituriez R, Joanny JF, Prost J: Spontaneous flow transition in active polar gels. Europhysics Letters (EPL). 2005, 70 (3): 404-410. 10.1209/epl/i2004-10501-2.

    Article  ADS  Google Scholar 

  13. Cates ME, Fielding SM, Marenduzzo D, Orlandini E, Yeomans JM: Shearing Active Gels Close to the Isotropic-Nematic Transition. Physical Review Letters. 2008, 101 (6): 068102-

    Article  ADS  Google Scholar 

  14. Giomi L, Liverpool TB, Marchetti MC: Sheared active fluids: Thickening, thinning, and vanishing viscosity. Physical Review E (Statistical, Nonlinear, and Soft Matter Physics). 2010, 81 (5): 051908-

    Article  ADS  MathSciNet  Google Scholar 

  15. N'ed'elec F, Surrey T, Maggs A, Leibler S: Self-organization of microtubules and motors. Nature. 1997, 389 (6648): 305-308. 10.1038/38532.

    Article  ADS  Google Scholar 

  16. Surrey T, Nédélec F, Leibler S, Karsenti E: Physical Properties Determining Self-Organization of Motors and Microtubules. Science. 2001, 292 (5519): 1167-1171. 10.1126/science.1059758.

    Article  ADS  Google Scholar 

  17. Kruse K, Joanny JF, Julicher F, Prost J, Sekimoto K: Asters, vortices, and rotating spirals in active gels of polar filaments. Physical Review Letters. 2004, 92 (7): 078101-

    Article  ADS  Google Scholar 

  18. Elgeti J, Cates ME, Marenduzzo D: Defect hydrodynamics in 2D polar active fluids. Soft Matter. 2011, 7 (7): 3177-10.1039/c0sm01097a.

    Article  ADS  Google Scholar 

  19. Head DA, Gompper G, Briels WJ: Microscopic basis for pattern formation and anomalous transport in two-dimensional active gels. Soft Matter. 2011, 7: 3116-3126. 10.1039/c0sm00888e.

    Article  ADS  Google Scholar 

  20. Liverpool TB, Marchetta MC: Instabilities of isotropic solutions of active polar filaments. Phys Rev Lett. 2004, 90: 138102-

    Article  ADS  Google Scholar 

  21. Ziebert F, Zimmermann W: Nonlinear competition between asters and stripes in filament-motor systems. Euro Phys J E. 2005, 18: 41-10.1140/epje/i2005-10029-3.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  22. Kraikivski P, Lipowsky R, Kierfeld J: Enhanced Ordering of Interacting Filaments by Molecular Motors. Physical Review Letters. 2006, 96 (25): 258103-

    Article  ADS  Google Scholar 

  23. Schaller V, Weber C, Semmrich C, Frey E, Bausch AR: Polar patterns of driven filaments. Nature. 2010, 467 (7311): 73-77. 10.1038/nature09312.

    Article  ADS  Google Scholar 

  24. Schaller V, Weber C, Frey E, Bausch AR: Polar pattern formation: hydrodynamic coupling of driven filaments. Soft Matter. 2011, 7 (7): 3213-3218. 10.1039/c0sm01063d.

    Article  ADS  Google Scholar 

  25. Head DA, Mizuno D: Nonlocal fluctuation correlations in active gels. Physical Review E (Statistical, Nonlinear, and Soft Matter Physics). 2010, 81 (4): 041910-

    Article  ADS  Google Scholar 

  26. Czirok A, BenJacob E, Cohen I, Vicsek T: Formation of complex bacterial colonies via self-generated vortices. Physical Review E (Statistical, Nonlinear, and Soft Matter Physics). 1996, 54 (2): 1791-1801. 10.1103/PhysRevE.54.1791.

    Article  ADS  Google Scholar 

  27. Ramaswamy S: The Mechanics and Statistics of Active Matter. Annual Review of Condensed Matter Physics. 2010, 1: 323-345. 10.1146/annurev-conmatphys-070909-104101.

    Article  ADS  Google Scholar 

  28. Toner J, Tu Y: Flocks, herds, and schools: A quantitative theory of flocking. Physical Review E (Statistical, Nonlinear, and Soft Matter Physics). 1998, 58 (4): 4828-4858. 10.1103/PhysRevE.58.4828.

    Article  ADS  MathSciNet  Google Scholar 

  29. Allen MP, Tildesley DJ: Computer Simulation of Liquids. 1989, Oxford University Press, USA

    Google Scholar 

  30. Doi M, Edwards SF: The Theory of Polymer Dynamics (International Series of Monographs on Physics). 1988, Oxford University Press, USA

    Google Scholar 

  31. Spurrier JD: Comm Stats - Thy Mech. 1984, 13: 1635-10.1080/03610928408828782.

    Article  MathSciNet  Google Scholar 

  32. D'Agostino RB, Stephens MA, (Eds): Goodness-of-fit-techniques (Statistics: a Series of Textbooks and Monographs). Dekker. 1986, 68: 1

    Google Scholar 

  33. Howard J: Mechanics of Motor Proteins and the Cy-toskeleton. 2001, Sinauer, USA

    Google Scholar 

  34. Soares e Silva M, Alvarado J, Nguyen J, Georgoulia N, Mulder B, Koenderink GH: Self-organized patterns of actin filaments in cell-sized confinement. Soft Matter. 2011, 7 (22): 10631-10641. 10.1039/c1sm06060k.

    Article  ADS  Google Scholar 

Download references

Acknowledgements

Financial support of this project by the European Network of Excellence "SoftComp" through a joint postdoctoral fellowship for DAH is gratefully acknowledged.

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to David A Head.

Additional information

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Authors' contributions

DAH, WJB, and GG designed research; DAH performed simulations and analyzed data; DAH, WJB, and GG wrote the paper. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Electronic supplementary material

13628_2011_18_MOESM1_ESM.MP4

Additional file 1: Movie showing the transition from the initial conditions to a spindle steady state. System parameters are identical to Figure 2(a). The colour scheme for this and all movies are as follows: Filaments are light (dark) near their plus (minus) ends; the blue-green hue is to aid visualisation and has no significance. Motors are coloured in red. (MP4 4 MB)

13628_2011_18_MOESM2_ESM.MP4

Additional file 2: Movie showing the transition from the initial conditions to an aster steady state. System parameters are identical to Figure 2(b). (MP4 2 MB)

13628_2011_18_MOESM3_ESM.MP4

Additional file 3: Movie showing the transition from the initial conditions to a nematic steady state. System parameters are identical to Figure 2(c). (MP4 4 MB)

13628_2011_18_MOESM4_ESM.MP4

Additional file 4: Movie showing the transition from the initial conditions to a semi-aster steady state. System parameters are identical to Figure 2(d). (MP4 2 MB)

13628_2011_18_MOESM5_ESM.MP4

Additional file 5: Movie showing the transition from the initial conditions to a dynamic vortex, and subsequent contraction to a semi-aster. System parameters are identical to Figure 6. (MP4 3 MB)

13628_2011_18_MOESM6_ESM.MP4

Additional file 6: Identical run to additional file 5 , with one filament highlighted and the remaining translucent. (MP4 3 MB)

Authors’ original submitted files for images

Rights and permissions

This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Head, D.A., Briels, W. & Gompper, G. Spindles and active vortices in a model of confined filament-motor mixtures. BMC Biophys 4, 18 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1186/2046-1682-4-18

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/2046-1682-4-18

Keywords