Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS March Meeting 2019
Volume 64, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 4–8, 2019; Boston, Massachusetts
Session X65: Physics of Development and Stem Cells
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Friday, March 8, 2019
BCEC
Room: 260
Sponsoring
Units:
DBIO GSOFT
Chair: Stefano di Talia, Duke University
Abstract: X65.00005 : Limiting-pool mechanism of size control of nucleoli in the C. elegans embryo*
9:36 AM–9:48 AM
Presenter:
Rabeya Hussaini
(Physics, Brandeis University)
Authors:
Lishibanya Mohapatra
(Physics, Brandeis University)
Rabeya Hussaini
(Physics, Brandeis University)
Stephanie C. Weber
(Biology, McGill University)
Jane Kondev
(Physics, Brandeis University)
these assemblies form and stably persist are not well understood. Here, we consider the assembly of
nucleoli in C. elegans embryo as a model-system for questions regarding the mechanisms controlling the
size of self-assembling structures within the cell. Recent experiments suggest that, in C. elegans early
embryo, nucleoli grow until the pool of its building blocks is depleted from the nucleoplasm. This is
known as the ‘limiting-pool’ mechanism.
In order to study experimental signatures of the limiting-pool mechanism, we consider a simple model
of the self-assembly of two spherical structures from a common pool of building blocks. Using theory
and simulations, we analyze the time series of the sizes of the spherical structures and make specific
predictions about their autocorrelation functions. We then compare these theoretical results to
fluorescence data from experiments that measure nucleoli size as a function of time in late stages of C.
elegans embryo development. This approach can be used in other experimental systems to
quantitatively test for the limiting-pool mechanism, and can be extended to other size-control
mechanisms.
*NSF grants DMR-1610737, the Simons Foundation grant 400108
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