Abstract

Nuclear morphology is an important indicator of cell function. It is regulated by a variety of factors such as the osmotic pressure difference between the nucleoplasm and cytoplasm, cytoskeletal forces, elasticity of the nuclear envelope and chromosomes. Nucleus shape and size are typically quantified using multiple geometrical quantities that are not necessarily independent of one another. This interdependence makes it difficult to decipher the implications of changes in nuclear morphology. We resolved this by analyzing nucleus shapes of populations for multiple cell lines using a mechanics-based model. We deduced two independent nondimensional parameters, namely, flatness index and isometric scale factor. We show that nuclei in a cell population have similar flatness but variable scale factor. Furthermore, nuclei of different cell lines segregate according to flatness. Cellular perturbations using biochemical and biomechanical techniques suggest that the flatness index correlates with actin tension and the scale factor anticorrelates with elastic modulus of nuclear envelope. We argue that nuclear morphology measures such as volume, projected area, height etc., are subsumed by flatness and scale factor, which can unambiguously characterize nuclear morphology.

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