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Creators/Authors contains: "Agashe, Atharva"

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  1. Discher, Dennis (Ed.)
    Abstract Accurate positioning of the mitotic spindle within the rounded cell body is critical to physiological maintenance. Mitotic cells encounter confinement from neighboring cells or the extracellular matrix (ECM), which can cause rotation of mitotic spindles and tilting of the metaphase plate (MP). To understand the effect of confinement on mitosis by fibers (ECM confinement), we use flexible ECM-mimicking nanofibers that allow natural rounding of the cell body while confining it to differing levels. Rounded mitotic bodies are anchored in place by actin retraction fibers (RFs) originating from adhesions on fibers. We discover that the extent of confinement influences RF organization in 3D, forming triangular and band-like patterns on the cell cortex under low and high confinement, respectively. Our mechanistic analysis reveals that the patterning of RFs on the cell cortex is the primary driver of the MP rotation. A stochastic Monte Carlo simulation of the centrosome, chromosome, membrane interactions, and 3D arrangement of RFs recovers MP tilting trends observed experimentally. Under high ECM confinement, the fibers can mechanically pinch the cortex, causing the MP to have localized deformations at contact sites with fibers. Interestingly, high ECM confinement leads to low and high MP tilts, which we mechanistically show to depend upon the extent of cortical deformation, RF patterning, and MP position. We identify that cortical deformation and RFs work in tandem to limit MP tilt, while asymmetric positioning of MP leads to high tilts. Overall, we provide fundamental insights into how mitosis may proceed in ECM-confining microenvironments in vivo. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available June 30, 2026
  2. Abstract Multicellular spheroids have shown great promise in 3D biology. Many techniques exist to form spheroids, but how cells take mechanical advantage of native fibrous extracellular matrix (ECM) to form spheroids remains unknown. Here, we identify the role of fiber diameter, architecture, and cell contractility on spheroids’ spontaneous formation and growth in ECM-mimicking fiber networks. We show that matrix deformability revealed through force measurements on aligned fiber networks promotes spheroid formation independent of fiber diameter. At the same time, larger-diameter crosshatched networks of low deformability abrogate spheroid formation. Thus, designing fiber networks of varying diameters and architectures allows spatial patterning of spheroids and monolayers simultaneously. Forces quantified during spheroid formation revealed the contractile role of Rho-associated protein kinase in spheroid formation and maintenance. Interestingly, we observed spheroid–spheroid and multiple spheroid mergers initiated by cell exchanges to form cellular bridges connecting the two spheroids. Unexpectedly, we found large pericyte spheroids contract rhythmically. Transcriptomic analysis revealed striking changes in cell–cell, cell–matrix, and mechanosensing gene expression profiles concordant with spheroid assembly on fiber networks. Overall, we ascertained that contractility and network deformability work together to spontaneously form and pattern 3D spheroids, potentially connecting in vivo matrix biology with developmental, disease, and regenerative biology. 
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  3. Polarized fluorescence microscopy is a valuable tool for measuring molecular orientations in biological samples, but techniques for recovering three-dimensional orientations and positions of fluorescent ensembles are limited. We report a polarized dual-view light-sheet system for determining the diffraction-limited three-dimensional distribution of the orientations and positions of ensembles of fluorescent dipoles that label biological structures. We share a set of visualization, histogram, and profiling tools for interpreting these positions and orientations. We model the distributions based on the polarization-dependent efficiency of excitation and detection of emitted fluorescence, using coarse-grained representations we call orientation distribution functions (ODFs). We apply ODFs to create physics-informed models of image formation with spatio-angular point-spread and transfer functions. We use theory and experiment to conclude that light-sheet tilting is a necessary part of our design for recovering all three-dimensional orientations. We use our system to extend known two-dimensional results to three dimensions in FM1-43-labeled giant unilamellar vesicles, fast-scarlet-labeled cellulose in xylem cells, and phalloidin-labeled actin in U2OS cells. Additionally, we observe phalloidin-labeled actin in mouse fibroblasts grown on grids of labeled nanowires and identify correlations between local actin alignment and global cell-scale orientation, indicating cellular coordination across length scales. 
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  4. A high porosity (88%) and ultrathin (<3 μm) fibrous basement membrane mimic using (A) suspended nanofiber networks for a (B) brain endothelial–pericyte co-culture model. (C) Our approach achieved low cell membrane and nuclei separations. 
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  5. During mitosis, cells round up and utilize the interphase adhesion sites within the fibrous extracellular matrix (ECM) as guidance cues to orient the mitotic spindles. Here, using suspended ECM-mimicking nanofiber networks, we explore mitotic outcomes and error distribution for various interphase cell shapes. Elongated cells attached to single fibers through two focal adhesion clusters (FACs) at their extremities result in perfect spherical mitotic cell bodies that undergo significant 3-dimensional (3D) displacement while being held by retraction fibers (RFs). Increasing the number of parallel fibers increases FACs and retraction fiber-driven stability, leading to reduced 3D cell body movement, metaphase plate rotations, increased interkinetochore distances, and significantly faster division times. Interestingly, interphase kite shapes on a crosshatch pattern of four fibers undergo mitosis resembling single-fiber outcomes due to rounded bodies being primarily held in position by RFs from two perpendicular suspended fibers. We develop a cortex–astral microtubule analytical model to capture the retraction fiber dependence of the metaphase plate rotations. We observe that reduced orientational stability, on single fibers, results in increased monopolar mitotic defects, while multipolar defects become dominant as the number of adhered fibers increases. We use a stochastic Monte Carlo simulation of centrosome, chromosome, and membrane interactions to explain the relationship between the observed propensity of monopolar and multipolar defects and the geometry of RFs. Overall, we establish that while bipolar mitosis is robust in fibrous environments, the nature of division errors in fibrous microenvironments is governed by interphase cell shapes and adhesion geometries. 
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