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Dive into the research topics where Nir S. Gov is active.

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Featured researches published by Nir S. Gov.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Metabolic remodeling of the human red blood cell membrane

YongKeun Park; Catherine A. Best; Thorsten Auth; Nir S. Gov; S. A. Safran; Gabriel Popescu; S. Suresh; Michael S. Feld

The remarkable deformability of the human red blood cell (RBC) results from the coupled dynamic response of the phospholipid bilayer and the spectrin molecular network. Here we present quantitative connections between spectrin morphology and membrane fluctuations of human RBCs by using dynamic full-field laser interferometry techniques. We present conclusive evidence that the presence of adenosine 5′-triphosphate (ATP) facilitates non-equilibrium dynamic fluctuations in the RBC membrane that are highly correlated with the biconcave shape of RBCs. Spatial analysis of the fluctuations reveals that these non-equilibrium membrane vibrations are enhanced at the scale of spectrin mesh size. Our results indicate that the dynamic remodeling of the coupled membranes powered by ATP results in non-equilibrium membrane fluctuations manifesting from both metabolic and thermal energies and also maintains the biconcave shape of RBCs.


Biophysical Journal | 2006

Dynamics of Membranes Driven by Actin Polymerization

Nir S. Gov; Ajay Gopinathan

A motile cell, when stimulated, shows a dramatic increase in the activity of its membrane, manifested by the appearance of dynamic membrane structures such as lamellipodia, filopodia, and membrane ruffles. The external stimulus turns on membrane bound activators, like Cdc42 and PIP2, which cause increased branching and polymerization of the actin cytoskeleton in their vicinity leading to a local protrusive force on the membrane. The emergence of the complex membrane structures is a result of the coupling between the dynamics of the membrane, the activators, and the protrusive forces. We present a simple model that treats the dynamics of a membrane under the action of actin polymerization forces that depend on the local density of freely diffusing activators on the membrane. We show that, depending on the spontaneous membrane curvature associated with the activators, the resulting membrane motion can be wavelike, corresponding to membrane ruffling and actin waves, or unstable, indicating the tendency of filopodia to form. Our model also quantitatively explains a variety of related experimental observations and makes several testable predictions.


Cell | 2015

Actin Flows Mediate a Universal Coupling between Cell Speed and Cell Persistence

Paolo Maiuri; J.-F. Rupprecht; Stefan Wieser; Verena Ruprecht; Olivier Bénichou; Nicolas Carpi; Mathieu Coppey; Simon De Beco; Nir S. Gov; Carl-Philipp Heisenberg; Carolina Lage Crespo; Franziska Lautenschlaeger; Maël Le Berre; Ana-Maria Lennon-Duménil; Matthew Raab; Hawa-Racine Thiam; Matthieu Piel; Michael Sixt; Raphaël Voituriez

Cell movement has essential functions in development, immunity, and cancer. Various cell migration patterns have been reported, but no general rule has emerged so far. Here, we show on the basis of experimental data in vitro and in vivo that cell persistence, which quantifies the straightness of trajectories, is robustly coupled to cell migration speed. We suggest that this universal coupling constitutes a generic law of cell migration, which originates in the advection of polarity cues by an actin cytoskeleton undergoing flows at the cellular scale. Our analysis relies on a theoretical model that we validate by measuring the persistence of cells upon modulation of actin flow speeds and upon optogenetic manipulation of the binding of an actin regulator to actin filaments. Beyond the quantitative prediction of the coupling, the model yields a generic phase diagram of cellular trajectories, which recapitulates the full range of observed migration patterns.


Nature Cell Biology | 2013

A soft cortex is essential for asymmetric spindle positioning in mouse oocytes

Agathe Chaigne; Clément Campillo; Nir S. Gov; Raphaël Voituriez; Jessica Azoury; Claudia Umaña-Diaz; Maria Almonacid; Isabelle Queguiner; Pierre Nassoy; Cécile Sykes; Marie-Hélène Verlhac; Marie-Emilie Terret

At mitosis onset, cortical tension increases and cells round up, ensuring correct spindle morphogenesis and orientation. Thus, cortical tension sets up the geometric requirements of cell division. On the contrary, cortical tension decreases during meiotic divisions in mouse oocytes, a puzzling observation because oocytes are round cells, stable in shape, that actively position their spindles. We investigated the pathway leading to reduction in cortical tension and its significance for spindle positioning. We document a previously uncharacterized Arp2/3-dependent thickening of the cortical F-actin essential for first meiotic spindle migration to the cortex. Using micropipette aspiration, we show that cortical tension decreases during meiosis I, resulting from myosin-II exclusion from the cortex, and that cortical F-actin thickening promotes cortical plasticity. These events soften and relax the cortex. They are triggered by the Mos–MAPK pathway and coordinated temporally. Artificial cortex stiffening and theoretical modelling demonstrate that a soft cortex is essential for meiotic spindle positioning.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Physics of active jamming during collective cellular motion in a monolayer

Simon Garcia; Edouard Hannezo; Jens Elgeti; Jean-François Joanny; Pascal Silberzan; Nir S. Gov

Significance Collective cell motion is very important in many biological processes such as wound healing, embryogenesis, or cancer progression. Nevertheless, it is not clear which parameters control the transition from freely moving single cells to collective jammed motion. In this article, we uncover complex dynamics as a cell monolayer ages, where cell motion is shown to gradually slow down with time, while the distance over which cell displacements are correlated first increases drastically and then decreases. This change of behavior is not controlled by cell density but rather by a maturation of the cell−cell and cell−substrate contacts. By comparing experiments, analytic model, and detailed particle-based simulations, we shed light on this biological amorphous solidification process. Although collective cell motion plays an important role, for example during wound healing, embryogenesis, or cancer progression, the fundamental rules governing this motion are still not well understood, in particular at high cell density. We study here the motion of human bronchial epithelial cells within a monolayer, over long times. We observe that, as the monolayer ages, the cells slow down monotonously, while the velocity correlation length first increases as the cells slow down but eventually decreases at the slowest motions. By comparing experiments, analytic model, and detailed particle-based simulations, we shed light on this biological amorphous solidification process, demonstrating that the observed dynamics can be explained as a consequence of the combined maturation and strengthening of cell−cell and cell−substrate adhesions. Surprisingly, the increase of cell surface density due to proliferation is only secondary in this process. This analysis is confirmed with two other cell types. The very general relations between the mean cell velocity and velocity correlation lengths, which apply for aggregates of self-propelled particles, as well as motile cells, can possibly be used to discriminate between various parameter changes in vivo, from noninvasive microscopy data.


Biophysical Journal | 2010

Physical model of the dynamic instability in an expanding cell culture.

Shirley Mark; Roie Shlomovitz; Nir S. Gov; Mathieu Poujade; Erwan Grasland-Mongrain; Pascal Silberzan

Collective cell migration is of great significance in many biological processes. The goal of this work is to give a physical model for the dynamics of cell migration during the wound healing response. Experiments demonstrate that an initially uniform cell-culture monolayer expands in a nonuniform manner, developing fingerlike shapes. These fingerlike shapes of the cell culture front are composed of columns of cells that move collectively. We propose a physical model to explain this phenomenon, based on the notion of dynamic instability. In this model, we treat the first layers of cells at the front of the moving cell culture as a continuous one-dimensional membrane (contour), with the usual elasticity of a membrane: curvature and surface-tension. This membrane is active, due to the forces of cellular motility of the cells, and we propose that this motility is related to the local curvature of the culture interface; larger convex curvature correlates with a stronger cellular motility force. This shape-force relation gives rise to a dynamic instability, which we then compare to the patterns observed in the wound healing experiments.


Physical Review Letters | 2007

Force balance and membrane shedding at the red-blood-cell surface.

Pierre Sens; Nir S. Gov

During the aging of the red-blood cell, or under conditions of extreme echinocytosis, membrane is shed from the cell plasma membrane in the form of nanovesicles. We propose that this process is the result of the self-adaptation of the membrane surface area to the elastic stress imposed by the spectrin cytoskeleton, via the local buckling of membrane under increasing cytoskeleton stiffness. This model introduces the concept of force balance as a regulatory process at the cell membrane and quantitatively reproduces the rate of area loss in aging red-blood cells.


Cytoskeleton | 2008

Dynamic compartmentalization of protein tyrosine phosphatase receptor Q at the proximal end of stereocilia: Implication of myosin VI-based transport

Hirofumi Sakaguchi; Joshua Tokita; Moshe Naoz; Daniel F. Bowen-Pope; Nir S. Gov; Bechara Kachar

Hair cell stereocilia are apical membrane protrusions filled with uniformly polarized actin filament bundles. Protein tyrosine phosphatase receptor Q (PTPRQ), a membrane protein with extracellular fibronectin repeats has been shown to localize at the stereocilia base and the apical hair cell surface, and to be essential for stereocilia integrity. We analyzed the distribution of PTPRQ and a possible mechanism for its compartmentalization. Using immunofluorescence we demonstrate that PTPRQ is compartmentalized at the stereocilia base with a decaying gradient from base to apex. This distribution can be explained by a model of transport directed toward the stereocilia base, which counteracts diffusion of the molecules. By mathematical analysis, we show that this counter transport is consistent with the minus end-directed movement of myosin VI along the stereocilia actin filaments. Myosin VI is localized at the stereocilia base, and exogenously expressed myosin VI and PTPRQ colocalize in the perinuclear endosomes in COS-7 cells. In myosin VI-deficient mice, PTPRQ is distributed along the entire stereocilia. PTPRQ-deficient mice show a pattern of stereocilia disruption that is similar to that reported in myosin VI-deficient mice, where the predominant features are loss of tapered base, and fusion of adjacent stereocilia. Thin section and freeze-etching electron microscopy showed that localization of PTPRQ coincides with the presence of a dense cell surface coat. Our results suggest that PTPRQ and myosin VI form a complex that dynamically maintains the organization of the cell surface coat at the stereocilia base and helps maintain the structure of the overall stereocilia bundle.


Biophysical Journal | 2009

Retroviral Assembly and Budding Occur through an Actin-Driven Mechanism

Micha Gladnikoff; Eyal Shimoni; Nir S. Gov; Itay Rousso

The assembly and budding of a new virus is a fundamental step in retroviral replication. Yet, despite substantial progress in the structural and biochemical characterization of retroviral budding, the underlying physical mechanism remains poorly understood, particularly with respect to the mechanism by which the virus overcomes the energy barrier associated with the formation of high membrane curvature during viral budding. Using atomic force, fluorescence, and transmission electron microscopy, we find that both human immunodeficiency virus and Moloney murine leukemia virus remodel the actin cytoskeleton of their host. These actin-filamentous structures assemble simultaneously with or immediately after the beginning of budding, and disappear as soon as the nascent virus is released from the cell membrane. Analysis of sections of cryopreserved virus-infected cells by transmission electron microscopy reveals similar actin filament structures emerging from every nascent virus. Substitution of the nucleocapsid domain implicated in actin binding by a leucine-zipper domain results in the budding of virus-like particles without remodeling of the cells cytoskeleton. Notably, viruses carrying the modified nucleocapsid domains bud more slowly by an order of magnitude compared to the wild-type. The results of this study show that retroviruses utilize the cell cytoskeleton to expedite their assembly and budding.


Nature Cell Biology | 2015

Active diffusion positions the nucleus in mouse oocytes

Maria Almonacid; Wylie W. Ahmed; Matthias Bussonnier; Philippe Mailly; Timo Betz; Raphaël Voituriez; Nir S. Gov; Marie-Hélène Verlhac

In somatic cells, the position of the cell centroid is dictated by the centrosome. The centrosome is instrumental in nucleus positioning, the two structures being physically connected. Mouse oocytes have no centrosomes, yet harbour centrally located nuclei. We demonstrate how oocytes define their geometric centre in the absence of centrosomes. Using live imaging of oocytes, knockout for the formin 2 actin nucleator, with off-centred nuclei, together with optical trapping and modelling, we discover an unprecedented mode of nucleus positioning. We document how active diffusion of actin-coated vesicles, driven by myosin Vb, generates a pressure gradient and a propulsion force sufficient to move the oocyte nucleus. It promotes fluidization of the cytoplasm, contributing to nucleus directional movement towards the centre. Our results highlight the potential of active diffusion, a prominent source of intracellular transport, able to move large organelles such as nuclei, providing in vivo evidence of its biological function.

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Roie Shlomovitz

Weizmann Institute of Science

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S. A. Safran

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Thorsten Auth

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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Timo Betz

University of Münster

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Bechara Kachar

National Institutes of Health

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Anne Bernheim-Groswasser

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Arik Yochelis

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Ehud Fonio

Weizmann Institute of Science

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