Abstract
Cell chirality is an intrinsic property shown as biased cell rotation or orientation. Although the right-handed double helix of actin is known important, how a single form of molecular handedness manifests diverse forms of cell chirality remains unclear. Here, we found that the cell nucleus rotated with a clockwise (CW) bias in a small projected area, but this rotation reversed to an anticlockwise (ACW) bias as cell spreading increased. Actin analysis suggested that radial fiber polymerization accounts for the ACW bias. Alterations in transverse arc components (myosin II, mDia2, and tropomyosin 4) revealed that the CW bias is driven by the retrograde flow, originating from the tethered gliding motion of myosin II in the contractile structure of transverse arcs. Thus, an imbalance between radial fibers and transverse arcs results in cell chirality reversal. The findings elucidate the mechanisms underlying cell chirality reversal, providing a new perspective on mechanobiology.
Introduction
The development of an animal’s tissues or organs necessitates the establishment of left–right (LR) asymmetry (Lobikin et al., 2012). This includes the LR body axis that is vital for visceral distribution (Pohl and Bao, 2010; Wang et al., 2012) and chiral morphogenesis, crucial for the formation of tissue/organ architecture (Hozumi et al., 2006; Noël et al., 2013; Spéder et al., 2006; Veerkamp et al., 2013). However, the mechanism underlying the spontaneous emergence of LR asymmetry remains largely unknown. Cell chirality, a mechanical behavior shown as biased cell orientation or rotation (either clockwise (CW) or anticlockwise (ACW)), has been proposed as the origin of LR asymmetry at the tissue level (Danilchik et al., 2006; Lobikin et al., 2012). For example, blastomeres in Caenorhabditis elegans embryos exhibit a chiral skew event, leading to uneven cell distribution (Naganathan et al., 2014; Pohl and Bao, 2010). In a later stage of embryonic development, this chiral mechanics causes collective motion in epithelial morphogenesis (Hozumi et al., 2006; Sato et al., 2015; Taniguchi et al., 2011), eventually affecting the formation of genitalia (Sato et al., 2015) and the axial torsion of the hindgut (Hozumi et al., 2006; Taniguchi et al., 2011). In addition to its role in embryonic development, the presence of cell chirality can be recognized by its ability to generate single cellular torque (Liu et al., 2016; Naganathan et al., 2014), promote cell migration with LR bias,(Chen et al., 2012; Xu et al., 2007; Yao and Ding, 2020; Yao et al., 2021) or form specific alignment at the multicellular level (Chen et al., 2012; Hu et al., 2018; Wan et al., 2011). Through cell–cell communication, the chiral behavior results in the LR-biased assembly of the multicellular structure (Chen et al., 2012; Chin et al., 2018) and regulates the permeability of intercellular junctions (Fan et al., 2018).
Actomyosin activity is crucial for chirality at the organ (Spéder et al., 2006), tissue (Bertet et al., 2004), and cellular levels (Tamada and Igarashi, 2017). In in vivo systems, the expression of cell chirality can be suppressed by inhibiting actomyosin activity (Noël et al., 2013). In in vitro systems, the expression of cell chirality depends on actomyosin activity along micropattern boundaries (Chen et al., 2012; Tee et al., 2015). Two classes of actin filaments play major roles in actomyosin activity: dorsal stress fibers and transverse arcs (Hotulainen and Lappalainen, 2006; Tojkander et al., 2012). Dorsal stress fibers, also referred to as radial fibers, have one end anchored to the substrate through a focal adhesion, whereas the other end points radially toward the nucleus. Transverse arcs are curved actin filaments produced by the endwise annealing of myosin bundles, appearing as rings or nearly closed arcs centered around the nucleus. When cultured on micropatterned circles, radial fibers are unidirectionally tilted, forming a distinct chiral pattern of actin filaments (Tee et al.,2015). This pattern drives the chiral torque and rotation of cells (Bao et al., 2020; Kwong et al., 2019; Liu et al., 2016).
The molecular handedness of actomyosin filaments is essential for cell chirality. For example, formin-dependent actin polymerization has been proposed to cause the righthanded axial spinning of radial fibers, resulting in the ACW chiral pattern of actin filaments (Tamada and Igarashi, 2017; Tee et al., 2023; Tee et al., 2015). In addition, the overexpression of a-actinin-1 that crosslinks with the actin filament or modulates actin polymerization can lead to CW chirality (Chin et al., 2018; Djinovic-Carugo et al., 1999; Jalal et al., 2019; Tee et al., 2023). However, because an actin filament is formed only as a right-handed double helix, it remains unclear how a single form of molecular handedness can manifest diverse chirality across different cell types (Liu et al., 2016; Schonegg et al., 2014; Wan et al., 2011; Zaatri et al., 2021). The role of crosslinking or altered polymerization of right-handed actin filaments in chirality reversal remains vague and unresolved.
In this study, we report the reversal of cell chirality achieved by switching dominance between the two classes of actin fibers. During cell attachment and spreading, we first observed the reversal of chiral rotation of the nucleus, shifting from a CW-biased to an ACW-biased direction. Using micropatterning, we determined that the reversal of chirality was dependent on an increase in the projected cell area. This phenomenon was consistently observed across various cell types. Based on the analysis of actin distribution by using small-molecule drugs, we found that the polymerization of radial fibers originating from their barbed end near the cell edge is essential for ACW chirality. However, when cells were cultured on small islands or an inhibitor was used to suppress radial fibers, transverse arcs displayed a well-organized CW swirl approaching the cell center. Furthermore, perturbations in transverse arcs, either through the suppression of myosin IIa activity or gene silencing of mDia2 and tropomyosin 4 (Tpm4), enhanced ACW chirality. Because transverse arcs are formed at the dorsal surface of the cell cortex, the sarcomere-like contractile structure may serve as a torque dipole that rolls against the plasma membrane, eventually leading to the CW swirling of transverse arcs. Thus, an imbalance between the two classes of actin stress fibers results in the reversal of chirality. This study elucidated a general and previously unidentified mechanism underlying chirality reversal, providing a unique opportunity to further explore the role of cell chirality in regulating tissue morphogenesis.
Results
Cell chirality is reversed from CW to ACW bias during cell spreading
Attachment to a cell-adherent substrate is a prerequisite for expressing cell chirality in 2D culture (Chen et al., 2012; Wan et al., 2011). We performed time-lapse microscopy to record cell spreading and nuclei rotation during the spreading of human foreskin fibroblasts (HFF-1) on a culture dish. From 0 min to 240 min, cells underwent isotropic spreading and then anisotropic spreading until reaching their normal morphology on the culture dish (Figure 1A; Video 1). To assess the cell chirality, cell nuclei were tracked using binarized nuclei images to record the angular velocity of nuclei at 5 min intervals (Figure 1C and D). Notably, the nucleus rotation transitions several times from CW to ACW (Figure 1D). To determine potential chiral bias, we measured the angular velocity of 26 cells and calculated the percentage of CW and ACW rotation every 20 minutes throughout the timelapse imaging. Our results revealed that nucleus rotation was CW-biased at the beginning but reversed to ACW-biased over time (Figure 1E). Additionally, the cell projected area increased (Figure 1F) and the circularity of cell morphology decreased (Figure 1G and H). Because cells with non-circular shape would inhibit the expression of chiral rotation of cells (Liu et al., 2016), the increased projection area is more likely the reason for chirality reversal. To clarify this, the probability of ACW/CW rotation was further analyzed against the averaged projected area with different circularity. For circularity greater than 0.7, reversal of chirality was observed (Figure 1I). In contrast, reversal was not as apparent for cell circularity below 0.7 (Figure 1J). Together, these results suggest that chiral nucleus rotation may require a circular cell shape and can be reversed from CW to ACW with the increase of cell projected area.
Cell chirality is reversed from CW to ACW bias with incremental change of micro-island area
During cell attachment and spreading, the actin cytoskeleton undergoes a complete reorganization, such as formation of focal adhesions, recruitment of formin, maturation of actin filament stress fibers, and activation of Arp2/3 in lamellipodia. Thus, the chirality reversal may be a result of those dynamic processes but not necessarily the cell projected area in the transient period. To directly assess the role of the cell projected area, we confined the cell spreading in an isotropic form through applying arrays of fibronectin-coated circular islands with different areas, surrounded by cell-repellent Pluronic coating (Figure 2A). On fibronectin-coated micro-islands, time-lapse measurement started after the cells had fully spread to the defined area without further morphological dynamics. HFF-1 fibroblasts were again used to record nucleus rotation on micro-islands. Interestingly, when cells spread on the 500 μm2 pattern, the nucleus rotation was neutral (Figure 2B). Starting from 750 μm2, nucleus rotation became CW-biased (45.83 ± 1.96 % ACW with p-value < 0.01), which was consistent with the chiral bias of cells during spreading on culture dish. From 1000 μm2 to 2500 μm2, the chiral nucleus rotation changed to neutral and then reversed to ACW-biased (63.43 ± 2.90 % ACW with p-value < 0.0001) on 2500 μm2 of micro-islands. Thus, the results on micro-islands provide direct evidence that cell projected area was responsible for chirality reversal. To further prove that high circularity is required for area-dependent chirality reversal, cells were cultured on other non-circular shapes, including a triangle, square, and rectangle, with areas exhibiting CW (750 μm2) or ACW (2500 μm2) bias on circular islands. The reversal of cell chirality from small to large island was not observed in these cases, indicating that circular islands are required (Figure 2—figure supplement 1). Furthermore, to test the universality of such phenomenon, we performed nucleus rotation analysis on two other cell types (Figure 2C to D), C2C12 mouse myoblasts and human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs). All assessments showed the same chirality reversal depending on cell projected area, demonstrating the universality of this relationship.
Actin distribution upon drug treatment
To investigate the mechanism, we next examined the actin cytoskeleton on the aforementioned islands. Actomyosin cytoskeleton is known to play important role in the cell chirality (Chen et al., 2012; Wan et al., 2011). More importantly, when cultured as single cells on micropatterned circles, a chiral swirling pattern of radial actin fibers has also been reported (Tee et al., 2015). We first observed the actin structure of cell spreading on circular pattern that exhibiting ACW (2500 μm2, large pattern) and CW (750 μm2, small pattern) bias. When cultured on the 2500 μm2 pattern (Figure 3A, left), actin structure at the lamella arises as a chiral swirling pattern of radial fibers in conjunction with the transverse arcs (Hotulainen and Lappalainen, 2006; Tojkander et al., 2012). Using automated image processing to analyze the tilting angle of radial fibers with respect to the radial axis of each cell (Bao et al., 2020), an ACW tilting was revealed (Figure 3—figure supplement 1), suggesting the role of actin in nucleus rotation. To clarify the causal relationship between the nucleus and the actin structure, we observed actin organization of cell seeded on micropatterns after enucleation. By comparing actin filaments for the normal and enucleated HFF-1 fibroblasts on 2500 μm2 island, the ACW bias of actin filament was unchanged (Figure 3—figure supplement 2). These results suggest that the chiral rotation of the nucleus is likely a result of chiral structure of actin, rather than the chiral rotation of the nucleus causing the formation of actin chiral structure.
On the other hand, for cells on the 750 μm2 pattern, CW rotation of nucleus was observed (Figure 2B). However, only ventral fibers and transverse arcs remained in these cells, while radial fibers were significantly reduced (Figure 3B, left). To visualize this structural difference, we used image stacking (see fluorescent staining in the method). On 2500 μm2 pattern, the highest intensity showed a ring shape where the radial fibers were located (Figure 3A, right). In contrast, on 750 μm2 pattern, the actin ring was replaced by an accumulation of actin at the cell center (Figure 3B, right).
To further analyze the actin structure, we calculated the structures’ pixel number and the percentage of radial fibers and transverse arcs. The pixel number of radial fibers is greatly reduced by 91.98 % on 750 μm2 compared to that on the 2500 μm2 pattern, while the pixel number of transverse arc is reduced by 70.58 % (Figure 3- figure supplement 3A). Additionally, we compared the percentage of actin structures on different pattern sizes (Figure 3- figure supplement 3B). On 2500 μm2 pattern, the percentage of radial fiber in the actin structure is 61.76 ± 2.77 %. While on 750 μm2 pattern, it only accounts for 31.13 ± 2.76 %. These results provide evidence of the reduction of radial fibers on a smaller pattern.
The greatly reduction of radial fibers is unexpected, as the chiral pattern of radial fibers is a hallmark of cell chirality (Tee et al., 2015). To further investigate this, we applied a series of cytoskeleton-related inhibitors on HFF-1 fibroblasts on two representative micro-islands, 750 μm2 (small island) and 2500 μm2 (large island). We identified A23187 Calcium Ionophore (A23) (Shao et al., 2015), Latrunculin A (LatA) (Yarmola et al., 2000), and NSC23677 (NSC) (Levay et al., 2013; Spiering and Hodgson, 2011) to modulate actin cytoskeleton. LatA inhibits F-actin polymerization by forming a 1:1 molar complex with G-actin. Based on previous studies, LatA has demonstrated reversing the chirality at or below 50 nM (Bao et al., 2020; Chin et al., 2018; Kwong et al., 2019; Wan et al., 2011). On the other hand, because inhibiting F-actin assembly can lead to the expression of CW chirality, we hypothesized that the opposite treatment might enhance ACW chirality. Therefore, A23187 was chosen with 2 μM concentration as it could initiate the actin remodeling and stress fiber formation (Shao et al., 2015). Furthermore, in the attempt to replicate the reversal of chirality by inhibiting F-actin assembly through other pathways, we explored NSC23677 at 100 μM, which was found to inhibit the Rac1 activation (Chen et al., 2011; Gao et al., 2004) and reduce cortical F-actin assembly (Head et al., 2003). On 2500 μm2 island, the original nucleus ACW chirality (63.43 ± 2.90 % ACW) remained unchanged by A23 treatment (Figure 3C) and became even more ACW-biased under NSC (Figure 3— figure supplement 4). In contrast, treatment of LatA could reverse the chirality to CW bias (45.58 ± 2.15% ACW, Figure 3C). Additionally, CW bias on 750 μm2 island was unaffected by the LatA treatment (Figure 3D), but neutralized by NSC (Figure 3— figure supplement 4). More interestingly, A23 reversed the nucleus rotation from its original 45.83 ± 1.96 % ACW to 54.00 ± 1.60 % ACW bias (Figure 3D). Based on the above results, treatment of LatA and A23 appears to be effective in reversing the induced ACW/CW bias on large and small island, respectively.
We next analyzed the actin distribution of HFF-1 fibroblasts in response to A23 and LatA treatment. Compared to untreated cells on 2500 μm2 pattern, actin was lessened around the nucleus with A23 treatment. More ventral stress fibers across the cell nucleus could be seen with LatA treatment (Figure 3E). To statistically illustrate actin distribution upon treatment, we applied image stacking. On 2500 μm2 pattern, A23 treatment pushes the actin toward the cell edge, while in contrast, the LatA treatment brought actin closer to the center (Figure 3F). Similar effects were seen for cells on 750 μm2 pattern. More interestingly, radial fibers were restored under A23 treatment (Figure 3G and H). To highlight this difference, we used a differential heatmap by subtracting the stacked actin image between treated and untreated cases. A23 clearly appeared to concentrate actin at the cell edge but reduce it at the center (Figure 3I), and a distinct peak of actin intensity was observed immediately adjacent to the cell edge (dashed line, Figure 3J). In contrast, under LatA treatment, actin was concentrated around the nucleus while the peripheral ring of actin was more reduced than that of the untreated control (Figure 3I and J). The same effects were also observed in cells on 750 μm2 islands (Figure 3K and L).
As polymerization of radial fibers arose from the barbed end near the leading edge, this suggests an increased polymerization of radial fibers upon A23 treatment, which may account for the ACW chiral rotation. Particularly for cells on 750 μm2 pattern, it was possible to change the original CW rotation to ACW rotation upon restoration of radial fibers. On the other hand, as an inhibitor of F-actin polymerization, LatA, appeared to reduce actin filament at the cell edge (Higashida et al., 2008) on both 2500 μm2 and 750 μm2 patterns, suggesting a suppressed actin polymerization. To validate the altered proportion of actin fibers, we calculated the percentage of radial fibers and transverse arcs with control and treated cells, i.e. A23 treatment on 750 μm2 islands or LatA treatment on 2500 μm2 islands. Compared to that of the control, the percentage of radial fibers pixel indeed increased with A23 treatment but decreased with LatA treatment, suggesting the role of polymerization of radial fibers which may account for the ACW chirality (Figure 3— figure supplement 5 and Figure 3— figure supplement 6).
Role of actin polymerization of radial fibers for ACW chirality
How does actin polymerization near the cell edge affect cell chirality? In 2015, Tee, Bershadsky and colleagues introduced the stair-stepping theory, which suggested how radial fiber polymerization generates ACW force and drives the actin cytoskeleton into the ACW pattern (Tee et al., 2015). To better elucidate this mechanism, we visualized live actin organization by transfection of either actin-GFP, or Lifeact, in HFF-1 fibroblasts. Cells on the 2500 μm2 island were chosen due to their easier observation. We first examined the actin organization of the untreated control cells with Lifeact (Figure 4A). Time-lapse microscopy showed that the centripetal growing radial fiber was pointed toward the cell center with an inward flow of transverse arcs (Figure 4A; Video 2). Notably, in untreated control cells, the radial fibers tilted more rightward with respect to the direction of elongation. Eventually, this right-tilted growth direction of radial fibers, accompanied by retrograde flow, drove an overall ACW rotation of the entire cytoskeleton around the cell nucleus. This resulted in a chiral swirling pattern of actin filament, showing a strong correlation with ACW nucleus rotation.
To better elucidate the role of actin polymerization of radial fibers, we compared the elongation rate of the radial fibers and the retrograde flow velocity of the transverse arcs. Actin-GFP transfected HFF-1 cells on 2500 μm2 pattern. We observed that the retrograde flow of transverse arcs was faster than the elongation rate of radial fiber (Figure 4B), which is consistent with the literature (Tee et al., 2015). This suggests that the retrograde flow of transverse arcs is not dependent solely on the elongation of radial fibers. More importantly, the velocity of radial fiber elongation was reduced by LatA treatment, while the inward flow velocity of transverse arcs remained unchanged compared to the control (Figure 4C and D). Thus, these results suggest that actin polymerization directly contributes to the elongation of radial fibers but not the retrograde flow of transverse arcs.
Altogether, our results suggest that inward-growing radial fibers with rightward tilt are the main contributors to ACW chirality. When treated by LatA (Figure 4D) or cultured on small islands that suppress the radial fibers (Figure 3B; Video 3), the ACW bias was reversed to CW bias. Notably, rightward tilting during actin polymerization could be explained by the helical structures of actin (Tamada and Igarashi, 2017; Tee et al., 2015). Specifically, in the ‘stair-stepping’ mode proposed by Tee et al., formin proteins cap and tether the barbed ends of actin filaments at focal adhesion. When new actin monomers are incorporated into the right-handed double helix, which drives the other free end with a right-handed axial spinning (Video 4) (Tee et al., 2015).
Transverse arcs contribute to CW chirality
While actin polymerization of radial fibers directly contributes to the ACW rotation of cells, the appearance of CW bias is unclear, as the reduced actin polymerization may simply neutralize chiral bias. For LatA-treated cells with Lifeact transfection, we noticed a very organized CW swirling of transverse arcs that approached the cell center during retrograde flow (Video 5). Using optical flow analysis, such inward flow with CW-bias swirling was observed to drive the cell to commit CW rotation (Figure 4E). This finding explains the increased actin concentration near the cell center shown by phalloidin staining of LatA-treated cells on the large island (Figure 3I). Notably, in some cases, the CW-bias of nucleus rotation occurred only in the presence of transverse arcs that swirled and wrapped towards the cell center with CW-bias, without distinct, bundled radial fibers (Video 6). Moreover, for cells on small islands, the nucleus rotation was solely driven by the retrograde flow of transverse arcs, without apparent radial fibers (Video 3). Thus, such CW swirling of transverse arcs may occur on itself without the need for radial fibers.
To further investigate this, we disturbed the major components of the transverse arcs. Transverse arcs are comprised of curved actomyosin bundles (Tamada and Igarashi, 2017; Tee et al., 2015) form in a periodic pattern through end-to-end annealing of myosin II and α-actinin (Tojkander et al., 2012). Importantly, myosin II bundles contribute to transverse arc contraction by walking on actin filament, which may lead to the higher speed in retrograde flow of transverse arcs (Figure 4B). Thus, myosin II or α-actinin perturbation would directly influence the transverse arc.
We first applied overexpression of α-actinin. We found that the overexpression of α-actinin enhanced CW rotation (Figure 5—figure supplement 1). Such enhancement the CW chirality was theorized by ‘screw-step’ motion (Tee et al., 2015) because it cross-links radial fibers, which may restrict and suppress their axial spinning in ACW chirality. Alternatively, as the main component of transverse arcs, α-actinin may simply enhance its formation, leading to enhanced CW chirality.
To further validate the role of transverse arcs in CW chirality, we applied Y27632, an inhibitor of Rho-associated kinase (ROCK), to down-regulate the function of myosin II (Salhia et al., 2008). Interestingly, treatment with Y27632 altered the actin arrangement and significantly reduced the highly enriched myosin II in transverse arcs observed in untreated cells, showing that actomyosin activity was disrupted (Figure 5A). We then compared actin and myosin II intensity distribution using a heatmap of a 2500 μm2 pattern. For non-treatment control (Figure 5B), myosin II was distributed with the highest intensity as a ring and colocalized with the actin ring. Remarkably, in the Y27632 treated cell (Figure 5B), although the actin arrangement was altered, the actin ring persisted. However, the myosin ring was heavily damaged and failed to colocalize with the actin ring. To quantify this, we analyzed myosin II median intensity and its colocalization with actin filament using Pearson’s R-value (Figure 5C and D), in which a higher value of median intensity indicated more activated myosin II, and higher R-value indicated more myosin II colocalized with actin filaments. Significant reductions in myosin II intensity and its colocalization with actin filament were seen upon Y27632 treatment. To illustrate the myosin II distribution, the myosin II intensity profiles were plotted to compare the control and Y27 treatment, further supporting the disruption of myosin ring (Figure 5—figure supplement 2).
With such disruption of myosin II function, we measured nucleus rotation under Y27632 treatment on islands2500 μm2 and 750 μm2. The ACW nucleus rotation was enhanced on both islands (Figure 5E and F). Similarly, this enhanced ACW rotation observed in cells treated with NSC (Figure 3—figure supplement 4) can also be explained by the cross-inhibition to myosin II (Shibata et al., 2015). In summary, these results suggest that myosin II activity of transverse arc is responsible for the CW-bias of cells.
Role of myosin IIa and transverse arc on CW chirality
To further investigate the role of myosin IIa and transverse arc in the CW chirality, we applied siRNA gene silencing on mDia2. mDia2 typically nucleates tropomyosin-decorated actin filaments, which recruit myosin II and anneal endwise with α-actinin-crosslinked actin filaments (Tojkander et al., 2011). The sarcomere-like contractile unit eventually condenses to myosin II-containing transverse arcs (Tojkander et al., 2011). We first compared the myosin IIa distribution of the control (Figure 6A) and mDia2-silenced cells. We reduced the protein expression upon siRNA (Figure 6B). Interestingly, while the myosin ring was heavily disrupted by mDia2 silencing, some myosin IIa was still observed at the region of transverse arcs (Figure 6C). In addition, more actin is distributed at the cell periphery, but the actin ring remains unchanged. Myosin IIa median intensity analysis and its colocalization with actin show that myosin IIa only partially dislocates from the actin ring, without significant reduction of its intensity (Figure 6D). Regarding nucleus rotation, mDia2 silencing appears to promote ACW rotation on both 2500 μm2 and 750 μm2 islands (Figure 6E and F). On the other hand, an opposite effect was seen by transfection of GFP-mDia2 in the overexpression assay. Thus, myosin IIa binding on tropomyosin decorated actin is required for CW nucleus rotation, and mDia2 can serve as an upstream endogenous factor to regulate it.
To further prove the essence of myosin II binding on the tropomyosin-decorated actin, we applied siRNA gene silencing on tropomyosin 4 (Tpm4). Among the isoforms, Tpm4-decorated actin filaments were particularly important for recruitment of myosin II, as Tpm4’s presence on the transverse arcs coincides with the incorporation of myosin II. As an essential facilitator for the gliding motion of myosin II on actin filaments, tropomyosin would shift to cover or disclose the myosin-binding site on the actin filament (Ebashi, 1972) and accelerate myosin head translocation to each of the myosin-binding sites (Hundt et al., 2016). We found that Tpm4 was colocalized with actin filaments (Figure 6—figure supplement 1) and could be significantly reduced upon siRNA treatment (Figure 6B). Interestingly, based on the distribution heatmap of myosin IIa, the ring pattern in control (Figure 6A) was eliminated in Tpm4-silenced cells (Figure 6G). Moreover, the transverse arcs became less apparent, and the actin ring was closer to the periphery of cells (Figure 6G). Notably, myosin IIa intensity and colocalization were both statistically lower in Tpm4-silenced cells (Figure 6H), implying that the Tpm4 silencing strongly disrupts the attachment of myosin II on actin filaments. We compared the myosin IIa distribution by the myosin intensity profiles (Figure 6—figure supplement 2), which showed a greater disruption in Tpm4-silenced cells compared to that in mDia2 silenced cells. Compared to the silencing of upstream mDia2, under which actin condensation still occurs, Tpm4 silencing seems to have more pronounced effect in breaking the binding of myosin IIa on actin filaments. As a result, the condensation of actin filaments in the transverse arcs was also damaged. Critically, the nucleus rotation of HFF-1 under Tpm4 silencing exhibited much greater ACW chirality on both the 2500 μm2 (from 63.43 ± 2.90 % ACW to 81.64 ± 2.79% ACW, Figure 6I) and 750 μm2 patterns (from 45.83 ± 1.96 % ACW to 61.37 ± 3.09 % ACW, Figure 6J). In contrast, Tpm1, Tpm2, and Tpm3 knockdown did not show any noticeable effect on chirality (Figure 6—figure supplement 3). Based on the above results, we can conclude that the myosin IIa binding and its gliding motion on Tpm4decorated actin filament is important for cell expression of CW chirality.
Actin height profile disclosed the transverse arcs and radial fibers layering
Myosin II and V have been shown to be left-handed spiral motors on the right-handed actin helix (Ali et al., 2002; Beausang et al., 2008). During the gliding motion, the left-handed walking of myosin II (Kovacs et al., 2007) could, on the other hand, cause left-handed twirling of an actin filament about its axis (Beausang et al., 2008). When near a surface or a boundary, such chiral processes cause spinning of individual filopodia of a growth cone (Tamada et al., 2010), chiral flow of the cell cortex (Danilchik et al., 2006; Furthauer et al., 2013; Pohl and Bao, 2010), and right-handed clockwise cell migration (Tamada and Igarashi, 2017). Thus, the contractile unit composed of left-handed-walking myosin II on left-handed-twirling of actin filaments may also serve as active actomyosin torque dipoles. If located near a surface, such as the cell cortex, actomyosin torque dipoles could cause right-screw rotation against the surface, eventually causing the transverse arc to swirl in the CW direction.
To explore the location of the transverse arc, we observed the actin structure and myosin distribution in the height profile. According to previous findings, the actin network has two distinct, vertically separated layers. For example, in U2O2 cells, dorsal stress fibers, also called radial fibers attached to focal adhesion, are in the lower layer, while the contractile actin arcs are in the upper layer (Burnette et al., 2014). With fluorescence staining of actin and immunofluorescence staining of myosin IIa, we observed the actin structure and myosin IIa using z-stack with confocal microscopy. The maximum projection and height profiles were created using ImageJ. We found that the maximum projection of actin and myosin IIa was colocalized (Figure 7A and B). More importantly, based on the height profile from ImageJ, two distinct layers of actin, one near the ventral substrate and one near to the dorsal surface of cells, were seen (green arrows in Figure 7A and B). However, myosin IIa was only seen near the dorsal surface, suggesting that the transverse arc was formed at the dorsal layer (Figure 7A, right; Video 7). We then investigated the actin structure of the Tpm4- silenced sample. A distinct layering of actin could again be observed with z-direction scanning (Figure 7C; Video 8). To visualize the structure, part of the actin was zoomed in on, and the level of actin was given different colors. It was observed that the radial fibers near the cell periphery were indeed located at the ventral surface, and the transverse arcs, with connection to the extension of radial fibers, were near the dorsal surface of the cells. Together, these results suggest that the CW-bias of transverse arcs could be a result of chiral processes near the dorsal surface. The transverse arcs could be observed above the nucleus with conjunction to a perinuclear actin cap (Figure 7— figure supplement 1). Thus, the transverse arcs’ CW-bias swirling and wrapping may eventually exert force causing nucleus rotation.
Discussion
In this study, we first observed chiral reversal from CW to ACW bias during cell spreading. Using micropatterning, the CW bias of nucleus rotation on smaller islands was reversed to ACW bias with increased area of micro-islands, suggesting a dependence on cell projected area. We examined nucleus rotation and actin distribution with various actin-related drugs. Examination of radial fibers and their elongation rate indicated that actin polymerization plays a role in ACW chirality. In contrast, CW bias was associated with transverse arcs. Using time-lapse microscopy, we found that the transverse arcs swirl CW during retrograde flow, causing the nucleus to commit to the CW-biased rotation. Further study indicates that the binding of myosin IIa and actin at transverse arcs near the dorsal surface of cells is required for the CW bias.
ACW chirality can be explained by the right-handed axial spinning of radial fibers during polymerization, i.e. ‘stair-stepping’ mode proposed by Tee et al. (Tee et al., 2015) (Figure 8A; Video 4). As actin filament is formed in a right-handed double helix, it possesses an intrinsic chiral nature. During the polymerization of radial fiber, the barbed end capped by formin at focal adhesion was found to recruit new actin monomers to the filament. The tethering by formin during the recruitment of actin monomers contributes to the right-handed tilting of radial fibers, leading to ACW rotation. Supporting this model, Jalal et al. (Jalal et al., 2019) showed that the silencing of mDia1, capZB, and profilin 1 would abolish the ACW chiral expression or reverse the chirality into CW direction. Specifically, the silencing of mDia1, capZB or profilin-1 would attenuate the recruitment of actin monomer into the radial fiber, with mDia1 acting as the nucleator of actin filament (Tsuji et al., 2002), CapZB promoting actin polymerization as capping protein (Mukherjee et al., 2016), and profilin-1 facilitating ATP-bound G-actin to the barbed ends (Haarer and Brown, 1990; Witke, 2004). The silencing resulted in a decrease in the elongation velocity of radial fiber, driving the cell into neutral or CW chirality. These results support our findings that reduction of radial fiber elongation can invert the balance of chirality expression, changing the ACW-expressing cell into a neutral or CW-expressing cell.
On the other hand, our results further suggest that the chiral structure of the transverse arc could be responsible for CW-swirling. The actomyosin complex in fibroblasts is arranged in a sarcomere-like structure consisting of actin and non-muscle myosin IIa. The motor domain of myosin IIa consists of two heads that can bind to the myosin-binding site on an actin filament. Importantly, during contraction, the myosin IIa molecule progresses in a left-ward “walking” motion towards the barbed end on the myosin-binding site of the actin filament (Beausang et al., 2008; Kovacs et al., 2007), covering around 10–11 nm in each step (Figure 8B) (Veigel et al., 1998). In addition, the arrangement of myosin IIa filament is assembled by the tail domain (Melli et al., 2018), forming a myosin IIa bipolar filament in parallel to the actin filaments in the sarcomere-like actomyosin structure (Hu et al., 2017). As a result, the stepwise walking of myosin IIa, which is tethered by the bundled tail, could plausibly drive a left-handed twirling of the actin filaments towards the C-terminal (Figure 8C; Video 9). Thus, the contraction based on left-handed-walking myosin II on actin filaments could serve as a chiral motor with torque dipole. Previous studies indicate that, when near an interface, the frictional force due to relative motion between the torque dipole and the surface, such as the cell cortex, could lead to chiral processes of the cytoskeleton (Furthauer et al., 2013). Here, we have consistently identified that transverse arcs are part of the actin filament network near the dorsal surface of cells connection to the extension of radial fibers, consistent with previous results (Tee et al., 2015). Thus, the contractile sarcomere-like unit may also act as a torque dipole that “rolls” against the plasma membrane, eventually leading the transverse arcs to tilt and swirl in a CW direction (Figure 8D, Video 10).
We propose that the imbalance between radial fibers and transverse arcs could control the reversal of chirality at the cell level. When radial fibers are dominant, radial fibers with right-screw motion would tilt rightward, accompanied with retrograde flow to establish an overall ACW rotation of cells (Figure 8E). In contrast, when the transverse arcs are dominant, the chiral processes of torque dipoles of the transverse arcs would swirl in CW, causing an overall CW rotation (Figure 8F). The transmission of chirality from the transverse arcs or the radial fibers to nucleus positioning can be regulated by Transmembrane Actin-Associated Nuclear (TAN) Lines and perinuclear actin caps (Davidson and Cadot, 2021), with TAN lines related to retrograde growth and actin caps connected to dorsal or ventral fibers (Luxton et al., 2010).
Notably, our proposed mechanism can be a universal, cell-type independent model. In previous results regarding cell alignment (Wan et al., 2011), the chirality of C2C12 and hMSCs showed opposite, cell-type dependent chirality. In contrast, we found that C2C12 and hMSCs exhibited similar, cell-type independent chiral reversal. Such a difference can be explained by the cell spreading area when attached to a fibronectin surface in cell culture by staining cell tracker (Discussion—figure supplement 1). With different spreading sizes for HFF-1 (2294.55 ±976.5737 μm2), C2C12 (860.8984 ±352.624 μm2), and hMSCs (4026.123 ±1828.682 μm2), the opposite chirality observed previously may simply be due to the cell spreading area on fibronectin coated surfaces falling in the range of CW rotation (C2C12) or ACW rotation (HFF-1 and hMSCs).
In summary, using nucleus rotation, our results indicate the main drivers for chirality, ACW chirality originates from the right-handed axial spinning growth of radial fiber, while CW chirality is driven by the retrograde flow of transverse arcs with CW swirling. An imbalance between these two classes of actin fibers through adjustment of cell spreading area or regulation of the main components of actin fibers (myosin II, a-actinin-1, mDia2, or Tpm4), cell chirality can be reversed. This finding provides a general mechanism of chirality reversal, which has broad implications applicable to different cell types and understanding of tissue morphogenesis.
Methods and Materials
Cell culture
HFF-1 human foreskin fibroblasts (SCRC-1041™, ATCC) were cultured in Dulbecco’s Modified Eagle Medium (4 mM L-glutamine, 4500 mg/L glucose, 1 mM sodium pyruvate and 1.5 g/L sodium bicarbonate, Life Technologies) supplemented with 15% fetal bovine serum and 1% penicillin–streptomycin (Life Technologies). Only cell passages from 2 to 10 were used for the experiment. C2C12 mouse myoblasts (CRL-1772™, ATCC) were thawed in P8 and used at P9. They were cultured in Dulbecco’s Modified Eagle’s Medium (4 mM L-glutamine, 4500 mg/L glucose and 3.7 g/L sodium bicarbonate, Life Technologies) and supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum and 1% penicillin–streptomycin (Life Technologies). Human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs, PT-2501, Lonza) were also cultured in Dulbecco’s Modified Eagle’s Medium (Life Technologies) and supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum and 1% penicillin–streptomycin (Life Technologies).
Nucleus rotation on culture dish
After confluence, the nuclei of HFF-1 cells were stained by applying 2 μg/ml H33342 trihydrochloride (Sigma-Aldrich) in medium for 30 min. Cells were suspended and reseeded onto a culture dish at a density of 5000 cells per cm2 and incubated in an incubator at 37 °C for 15 min for cell attachment. After removing the non-attached cells and replenishing with fresh medium, the dish was placed in a live cell incubator on a microscope stage (ChamlideTM TC incubator system, Live Cell Instrument) with 100% humidity and 5% CO2 in 37C. To record nuclei rotation, fluorescence images of the nuclei and phase contrast images were acquired with an Nikon Eclipse Ti-E microscope at 5 min interval for 4 h. Cell tracking and labeling was performed based on the shortest displacement by comparing the locational information of each cell at the current image and previous time interval, as shown by the trajectory of cell location for 4 h following cell attachment to the culture dish (Figure 1B). Automated image segmentation was used to measure the angular velocity of nuclei. In brief, after image binarization, the contour of the cell nuclei was fit by an oval shape to identify its long axis. By calculating the transient angular velocity of the long axis within the time interval, angular velocity was calculated by the angle difference of the nucleus at two consecutive images, which gives the transient angular velocity of each cell of each 5 min interval for the total 4 hour and 30 min time period. By grouping measurement of all cells every 20 min, the probability of ACW or CW rotation was determined. Then, the difference between the ACW/CW percentages was compared based on the projection area and circularity, which was calculated based on cells measured in the Nikon NIS-Elements.
Micropatterning
Photolithography was used to accomplish a series of cell adherent islands with various sizes. Glass slides were treated with piranha solution (sulfuric acid to hydrogen peroxide = 3:1, 100°C) for one hour. After rinsing and drying, the slides were treated with hexamethyldislazane (HMDS, Sigma-Aldrich) coating in a vapor phase for 5 min. AZ5214 photoresist (AZ Electronic Materials, Luxembourg) was spin-coated on substrates at 3000 rpm and baked at 95 °C for 2 min. The photoresist then underwent UV exposure and was developed using developer (AZ400k: deionized water 1:3) to imprint the desired pattern, followed by plasma treatment to remove the remaining photoresist on the pattern (800 mTorr at 30W). Next, the pattern was coated with fibronectin solution (20 μg/ml, Life Technology) for one hour. Afterward, the remaining photoresist was removed by rinsing in absolute ethanol three times, for 5 min each; substrates were then dried before use. Finally, the substrates were treated with 1% Pluronic F127 for 50 min before cell seeding.
Nucleus rotation on micropatterns with circular or other shapes
HFF-1 fibroblasts and C2C12 myoblasts were seeded at a density of 4000 cells/cm2 on circular patterned glass with different sizes ranging from 500 to 2500 μm2, while hMSCs were seeded at a density of 1000–2000 cells/cm2 on pattern sizes ranging from 1000 to 5000 μm2. For micropatterns with other shapes, HFF-1 fibroblasts were seeded at a density of 4000 cells/cm2 on equilateral triangle, square or rectangle micropattern of size 750 or 2500 μm2. After incubation for 30 min, cells were replenished with fresh growth medium for 3 h. Cells were treated with 2 μg/mL bisBenzimide H33342 trihydrochloride (Sigma-Aldrich) for 30 min and imaged by Nikon Eclipse Ti-E microscope at every 10 min interval for 2–3 h. The automated image segmentation was used for measuring the nucleus rotation as mentioned previously. The percentages of ACW or CW transient rotation of each cell was determined within the entire duration and averaged among many cells.
Drug treatment
To examine the role of actin in nucleus rotation, cells were treated with 50 nM of Latrunculin A (Sigma-Aldrich), 100 μM of NSC23766 (Sigma-Aldrich), 2 μM of A23187 (J&K Scientific), or 10 μM Y27632 (Alexis).
Analysis of fiber orientation and actin structure on circular pattern
The quantitative analysis of actin fiber orientation was carried out in MATLAB as described in previous studies (Bao et al., 2020). In brief, an adaptive threshold and Gaussian filter was applied to cropped actin images to generate a binarized image of actin. The central region of actin was removed to highlight the radial fibers and transverse arcs. The core skeleton of actin filament was then obtained by removing lines shorter than 8 pixels. The skeleton was classified as a straight line (the aspect ratio of surrounding ellipse of the line being greater than 4) or a curved line. For straight skeletons, orientation was obtained through the acute angle difference between the long axis of ellipse and the tangential direction to the center. For curved skeletons, the orientation was calculated according to the pixel location on the curved line, determined by the 3-point spline method and the tangential line to the center. Orientation of actin was defined as ACW when orientated from 0° to 90° and CW when orientated from -90° to 0°.
The actin structures can be identified by their characteristics. Radial fibers emerge from the cell boundary and point towards the cell center, which the orientation of radial fibers was defined from -65° to 65°. Transverse arcs are parallel to the cell boundary, the orientation of transverse arc was defined from -90° to -65° and 65° to 90°. With the angle of the filament regarding the cell center, the radial fiber or transverse arc can be classified and counted.
Enucleation of cell
Enucleated HFF-1 cells were prepared according to method stated in the literature (Degaetano and Schindler, 1987). Cells were plated on glass with fibronectin coating a night before the procedure. The glass was then placed into a 50 ml falcon tube with medium supplemented with 2 μg/ml of Cytochalasin D (Sigma-Aldrich). The falcon tube was then centrifuged at 10500 × g at 37 °C for one hour with an Eppendorf 5804R to enucleate cells. Cells were then replenished with fresh medium for recovery. The cells were then trypsinized and reseeded on a circular pattern for 6 hours before fixing. The fixed samples were stained with phalloidin and DAPI to observe the actin structure of enucleated cells.
Plasmid transfection
HFF-1 fibroblasts were seeded one night before the transfection (100,000 cells in a 35 mm dish). We used DNA plasmids, actin-GFP (a gift from Michael Davidson, Addgene plasmid # 56421), mRuby-Lifeact (a gift from Dr. Cheng-Han Yu of the University of Hong Kong), pCDNA_Lifeact-GFP_NLS-mCherry (Lifeact-GFP) (a gift from Olivier Pertz, Addgene plasmid # 69058), pEFmEGFP-mDia2 (a gift from Arthur Alberts, Addgene plasmid # 25407) and pEGFP-N1 alpha-actinin 1 (a gift from Carol Otey, Addgene plasmid # 11908). The OPTIMEM medium (ThermoFisher) and Lipofectamine 3000 Assay (ThermoFisher) were used for transfection. According to manufacturers’ suggestions, 500 ng of DNA plasmid was placed in OPTIMEM medium. Following the addition of P3000 Reagent and Lipofectamine 3000 Reagent, the mixture was incubated for 30 min to form lipofectamine complex before being applied to cells. Cells were then incubated with transfection mixture overnight, followed by replenishment with fresh medium for recovery. Next, the transfected cells were reseeded on a micropatterned surface at a density of 4,000 cells/cm2. After incubation for 30 min for the cell to spread fully, fresh medium was replenished before imaging.
Optical flow analysis
We used MATLAB’s built-in Optical Flow function to estimate the actin flow direction in LatA-treated cells. We used the Farneback method to estimate the motion vectors of every pixel through the comparison of consecutive frames of the video sequence. The sum motion vector of each pixel (Vx(sum), Vy(sum)) was calculated by adding the motion vectors with time (Vx(t,t+1,t+2,…), Vy(t,t+1,t+2,…)). The motion direction of each pixel was found by comparing the angle difference between the sum motion vector and the vector of the pixel’s location pointed towards the cell center.
Gene silencing
Invitrogen Silencer® Pre-designed siRNA was used to deplete Tropomyosins, Tpm1 (AM51331), Tpm2 (AM51331), Tpm3 (AM16708), Tpm4 (AM16708), and mDia2 (AM16708) (table S1). Transfection on HFF-1 was based on the Lipofectamine 3000 Reagent procedure, as mentioned above, with a final concentration of siRNA at 75 nM. After 24 h of transfection, fresh medium was replenished, and the experiment (nucleus rotation and fluorescence imaging) was performed on day 3 after the addition of transfection complex. Next, cells were treated with 2 μg/mL bisBenzimide H33342 trihydrochloride for 30 min before seeding on micropatterned circular islands. Incubation was done for 30 min for the cells to spread fully and fresh medium was replenished before imaging.
Fluorescent staining
HFF-1 fibroblasts were seeded on circular islands with sizes of 750 μm2 and 2500 μm2 at densities of 4,000 cells/cm2 for 30 min. Next, they were replenished with growth medium for 6 h. The cell was then treated with 4% paraformaldehyde (PFA) for 15 min, 0.2% Triton X-100 for 10 min, and Image-iTTM FX (ThermoFisher) signal enhancer for 30 min. Next, depending on the staining target, the cells were applied with Rhodamine Phalloidin (1/40, Life Technology) for one hour, rabbit anti-mDia2 antibodies (1/100, Life Technology), rabbit anti-myosin IIa antibodies (1/100, Cell Signaling), or rabbit anti-Tpm4 antibodies (1/100, Abcam) overnight, followed by application of secondary anti-rabbit antibodies (1/250, Life Technology) for one hour and DAPI staining (300 nM, ThermoFisher) for 5 min. It was then mounted with Fluoromount G (Electron Microscopy Sciences. Inc.) and imaged with a Nikon Eclipse Ti-E microscope. For heatmap distribution of actin, individual images were taken under the same setting (e.g., staining procedure, fluorescent intensity, exposure time, etc.). Next, individual images were stacked and averaged in MATLAB, with reference to the centroids of circular islands, and scaled based on the maximum/minimum intensity of the image. The prerequisite of cells for image stacking was that they had to be fully spread on either 2500 μm2 or 750 μm2 circular patterns. Then, the location for image stacking was determined by identifying the center of each cell spread in a perfect circle. Finally, the images were aligned at the center to calculate the averaged intensity to show the distribution heatmap on the circular pattern. For differential heatmaps, the intensity differences were calculated by subtraction between treated and untreated cases and scaled based on the maximum/minimum intensity difference of the image. Each of the individual heatmaps representing the distribution was generated using unique color intensity ranges, which could visualize the protein distribution within cells and variations among samples.
Photobleaching
FRAP experiments were performed using confocal microscope (Zeiss Laser Scanning Microscope LSM 880 NLO with Airyscan). The horseshoe-shaped region of interest (ROI) of the bleaching area was manually drawn. Two successive images of cell were captured prior to photobleaching, using 100% laser power for 40 s, followed by a 380 s recording of the image sequence of the cell with 10 s time interval. For measurement by photobleaching of radial fiber polymerization and transverse arc translocation velocity, kymographs were performed using an ImageJ plugin to visualize and quantify the movement.
Median intensity analysis
Immunofluorescence imaging of myosin IIa was used to analyze median intensity. The image exhibited a bimodal distribution of pixel intensity, in which the first mode represents the background intensity, and the second mode reflects the myosin IIa expression. The mean intensity of the entire image, which appears in between the two modes, was used as the cut-off intensity to extract the second mode. The second mode was then scanned and the median intensity of the second mode, normalized by the aforementioned cut-off intensity, was then used to represent the myosin IIa expression level. A higher median value indicates a greater intensity of myosin IIa, which suggests more activated myosin IIa.
Pearson’s R-value
Fluorescence imaging of myosin IIa and phalloidin was used to analyze the Pearson’s R-value. The calculation was carried out using ImageJ with Fuji, the plugin Coloc 2 function. The cell spread on the circular pattern was selected as the region of interest, and the analysis was based on pixel-correlation, which resulted from intensity. The intensity values of the pixels in two images were compared to the corresponding pixel. The Pearson’s R-value is calculated by the covariance between two sets of intensity, divided by the product of the standard deviations.
Lifeact-GFP-or Lifeact-mRuby-transfected Hff-1 cell imaging
Lifeact-GFP-transfected control cells were observed with a Leica SP-8 Confocal Laser Scanning Microscope. A live cell incubation chamber (Leica iRBE) was supplied by Life Imaging Services, with an air heater and CO2 control. Images were taken at 3 min intervals for 2.25 hours with a 63X oil lens.
Lifeact-mRuby-transfected cells were observed with a Nikon Eclipse Ti2-E microscope with a spinning disk confocal illuminator (LDI-7 Laser Diode Illuminator, 89 North). Images were taken with a 60X oil lens.
Lifeact-GFP-transfected cells treated with LatA were observed with a Nikon Eclipse Ti-E microscope with fluorescent light illuminator. Images were taken with a 40X oil lens.
Western blotting
For gene silencing validation, 75 nM siRNA was transfected for 24 hours and recovered for 48 hours before cell lysis. Proteins were first separated by 4–12 % SDS polyacrylamide gel (ThermoFisher) electrophoresis and transferred to a PVDF membrane (ThermoFisher). The membrane was blocked for one hour before incubation in primary antibodies at 4 °C overnight with the following dilution: GAPDH (1/1000, Cell Signaling), Tpm4 (1/800, Merck), and Diaph3 (1/1000, Abcam). This was followed by HRP-conjugated secondary antibodies (1/2000, Cell Signaling) for one hour at room temperature. Protein expression was detected with Pierce ECL Western Blotting Substrate (ThermoFisher) and the BIO-RAD ChemiDoc MP Imaging System.
Height profile of actin and myosin IIa
In confocal microscopy for the fluorescence image, z-stacks of phalloidin staining of Factin and immunofluorescence staining of myosin IIa were acquired with a Leica SP-8 Confocal Laser Scanning Microscope with a 63X oil lens and with Leica SP8 LIGHTNING. With a zoom-in function of 2–7 times, the z-stacked image was taken with a step-size of 0.05 to 0.1 μm during the image acquisitions.
Statistical Analysis
Student’s t-test was applied to evaluate statistical difference. The confidence level was set to 0.05 for all statistical tests. Statistical significance is symbolized by ns (p > 0.05), * (p ≤ 0.05), ** (p value ≤ 0.01), *** (p value ≤ 0.001), or **** (p value ≤ 0.0001).
Acknowledgements
We thank the Department of Infectious Diseases and Public Health, City University of Hong Kong, and Chinetek Scientific for sharing the Nikon Eclipse Ti2-E microscope with a spinning disk confocal illuminator (LDI-7 Laser Diode Illuminator, 89 North) and for the technical support. This study was supported by the following: Hong Kong Research Grant Council (11217820 and N_CityU119/19), Innovation and Technology Commission (ITS/098/20), The Science, Technology, and Innovation Commission of Shenzhen Municipality (JCYJ20210324134006017), and the City University of Hong Kong (9678242 and 6430620).
Additional Declarations
The authors declare no competing interests.
Supplementary Figures
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