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. 2016 Aug 23;111(4):824-831.
doi: 10.1016/j.bpj.2016.07.010.

Construction of Nuclear Envelope Shape by a High-Genus Vesicle with Pore-Size Constraint

Affiliations

Construction of Nuclear Envelope Shape by a High-Genus Vesicle with Pore-Size Constraint

Hiroshi Noguchi. Biophys J. .

Abstract

Nuclear pores have an approximately uniform distribution in the nuclear envelope of most living cells. Hence, the morphology of the nuclear envelope is a spherical stomatocyte with a high genus. We have investigated the morphology of high-genus vesicles under pore-size constraint using dynamically triangulated membrane simulations. Bending-energy minimization without volume or other constraints produces a circular-cage stomatocyte, where the pores are aligned in a circular line on an oblate bud. As the pore radius is reduced, the circular-pore alignment is more stabilized than a random pore distribution on a spherical bud. However, we have clarified the conditions for the formation of a spherical stomatocyte: a small perinuclear volume, osmotic pressure within nucleoplasm, and repulsion between the pores. When area-difference elasticity is taken into account, the formation of cylindrical or budded tubules from the stomatocyte and discoidal stomatocyte is found.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Ring to constrain the pore size. The membrane and ring are displayed in light gray (green) and in dark gray (red), respectively. The front half of the membrane is removed for clarity. To see this figure in color, go online.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Comparison of genus-5 vesicles without pore-size constraint (no ring) and with six rings of rpo/Rves=0.14 and 0.2. (a and b) Snapshots at (a) V=0.6 and (b) V=0.45 with no ring. Front and bird’s eye views are shown in (a). (ce) Dependence on the reduced volume V. (c) Free-energy profile F. (d) Mean aplanarity αpl. (e) Mean area difference Δa. Error bars are shown at several data points. To see this figure in color, go online.
Figure 3
Figure 3
Dependence on the maximum pore radius rpo for genus-5 vesicles with or without the volume constraint. (ad) Snapshots at (a) and (c) rpo/Rves=0.077 and (b) and (d) rpo/Rves=0.2. The rings are depicted with a half of the real minor radius for clarity. (eg) Dependence of the averages of (e) aplanarity αpl, (f) distance dpo between centers of the rings and vesicle, (g) reduced volume V, and area difference Δa. The solid and dashed lines in (g) represent V and Δa, respectively. To see this figure in color, go online.
Figure 4
Figure 4
Genus-5 vesicles with nin particles in the nucleoplasm for rpo/Rves=0.2. (a and b) Snapshots at (a) nin=6 and (b) nin=10 without the volume constraint. (ce) Dependence on V at nin=0, 6, and 10. (c) Free-energy profile F. (d) Mean aplanarity αpl. (e) Mean area difference Δa. Error bars are shown at several data points. To see this figure in color, go online.
Figure 5
Figure 5
Genus-5 vesicles with repulsion between the ring centers. (a and b) Snapshots at (a) rex/Rves=0.22 and (b) rex/Rves=0.37 for rpo/Rves=0.077. (ce) Dependence of the averages of (c) aplanarity αpl, (d) distance dpo between the centers of the rings and the vesicle, (e) reduced volume V, and area difference Δa. The solid and dashed lines in (e) represent V and Δa, respectively. To see this figure in color, go online.
Figure 6
Figure 6
Snapshots of genus-5 vesicles with the ADE potential at (ad) rpo/Rves=0.077 and (e and f) rpo/Rves=0.2. (a) V=0.6 and Δa0=0.5. (b) V=0.6 and Δa0=1.5. (c) V=0.6 and Δa0=2. (d) V=0.2 and Δa0=1.5. (e) V=0.6 and Δa0=1.5. (f) V=0.6 and Δa0=2. In the front view of (f), the front-half is removed and the cross sections are indicated by the thick (blue) lines. To see this figure in color, go online.
Figure 7
Figure 7
Snapshots of genus-8 vesicles at rpo/Rves=0.077 (a and b) without and (c and d) with the ADE potential. (a) No volume constraint. (b) V=0.4. (c) V=0.5. (d) Δa0=1.5. To see this figure in color, go online.

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