104 research outputs found
Motor regulation results in distal forces that bend partially disintegrated Chlamydomonas axonemes into circular arcs
The bending of cilia and flagella is driven by forces generated by dynein
motor proteins. These forces slide adjacent microtubule doublets within the
axoneme, the motile cytoskeletal structure. To create regular, oscilla- tory
beating patterns, the activities of the axonemal dyneins must be coordinated
both spatially and temporally. It is thought that coordination is mediated by
stresses or strains, which build up within the moving axoneme, and somehow
regulate dynein activity. While experimenting with axonemes subjected to mild
proteolysis, we observed pairs of doublets associate with each other and form
bends with almost constant curvature. By model- ing the statics of a pair of
filaments, we show that the activity of the motors concentrates at the distal
tips of the doublets. Furthermore, we show that this distribution of motor
activity accords with models in which curvature, or curvature-induced normal
forces, regulates the activity of the motors. These observations, together with
our theoretical analysis, provide evidence that dynein activity can be
regulated by curvature or normal forces, which may, therefore, play a role in
coordinating the beating of cilia and flagella
Extended Standard Map with Spatio-Temporal Asymmetry
We analyze the transport properties of a set of symmetry-breaking extensions
%, both spatial and temporal, of the Chirikov--Taylor Map. The spatial and
temporal asymmetries result in the loss of periodicity in momentum direction in
the phase space dynamics, enabling the asymmetric diffusion which is the origin
of the unidirectional motion. The simplicity of the model makes the calculation
of the global dynamical properties of the system feasible both in phase space
and in controlling-parameter space. We present the results of numerical
experiments which show the intricate dependence of the asymmetric diffusion to
the controlling parameters.Comment: 6 pages latex 2e with 12 epsf fig
Efficiency optimization in a correlation ratchet with asymmetric unbiased fluctuations
The efficiency of a Brownian particle moving in periodic potential in the
presence of asymmetric unbiased fluctuations is investigated. We found that
there is a regime where the efficiency can be a peaked function of temperature,
which proves that thermal fluctuations facilitate the efficiency of energy
transformation, contradicting the earlier findings (H. kamegawa et al. Phys.
Rev. Lett. 80 (1998) 5251). It is also found that the mutual interplay between
asymmetry of fluctuation and asymmetry of the potential may induce optimized
efficiency at finite temperature. The ratchet is not most efficiency when it
gives maximum current.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Microautophagy of the Nucleus Coincides with a Vacuolar Diffusion Barrier at Nuclear–Vacuolar Junctions
Nuclear-vacuolar (NV) junctions are organelle contact sites in yeast. They exclude nuclear pores from the organelle interface. On the vacuolar side, a lipid-dependent process excludes specific membrane proteins, such as V-ATPase, from the contact site. This suggests that NV junctions establish selective diffusion barriers
Zigzag Turning Preference of Freely Crawling Cells
The coordinated motion of a cell is fundamental to many important biological
processes such as development, wound healing, and phagocytosis. For eukaryotic
cells, such as amoebae or animal cells, the cell motility is based on crawling
and involves a complex set of internal biochemical events. A recent study
reported very interesting crawling behavior of single cell amoeba: in the
absence of an external cue, free amoebae move randomly with a noisy, yet,
discernible sequence of ‘run-and-turns’ analogous to the
‘run-and-tumbles’ of swimming bacteria. Interestingly, amoeboid
trajectories favor zigzag turns. In other words, the cells bias their crawling
by making a turn in the opposite direction to a previous turn. This property
enhances the long range directional persistence of the moving trajectories. This
study proposes that such a zigzag crawling behavior can be a general property of
any crawling cells by demonstrating that 1) microglia, which are the immune
cells of the brain, and 2) a simple rule-based model cell, which incorporates
the actual biochemistry and mechanics behind cell crawling, both exhibit similar
type of crawling behavior. Almost all legged animals walk by alternating their
feet. Similarly, all crawling cells appear to move forward by alternating the
direction of their movement, even though the regularity and degree of zigzag
preference vary from one type to the other
Construction of a consistent YAC contig for human chromosome region 3p14.1
Chromosomal deletions and translocations of human chromosome region 3p14 are observed in various human malignancies and suggest the existence of a tumor suppressor gene locus within this region. Tumors most frequently affected by these aberrations are small-cell lung cancer and renal-cell carcinoma. In continuation of our previously published YAC contig of chromosome region 3p14.2-p14.3, we report here on the construction of a YAC contig of at least 11 Mb that consisted of 171 YACs and covers the entire subregion 3p14.1. This contig includes the t(3;8) breakpoint of a hereditary renal-cell carcinoma localized in 3p14.2 and extends into human chromosome region 3p12-p13. It defines the order of 34 DNA probes in relation to reference markers D3S6 and D3S30 as well as the human protein tyrosine phosphatase-gamma gene. For 31 DNA probes we identified nonchimeric YACs by fluorescence in situ hybridization. The minimal tiling pathway consists of 16 yeast artificial chromosomes. As a prerequisite for identification of a putative tumor suppressor gene within this region, this contig renders human chromosome region 3p14.1 accessible to gene isolation
The Geometry of Soft Materials: A Primer
We present an overview of the differential geometry of curves and surfaces
using examples from soft matter as illustrations. The presentation requires a
background only in vector calculus and is otherwise self-contained.Comment: 45 pages, RevTeX, 12 eps figure
Bistability in the actin cortex
Multi-color fluorescence imaging experiments of wave forming Dictyostelium cells have revealed that actin waves separate two domains of the cell cortex that differ in their actin structure and phosphoinositide composition. We propose a bistable model of actin dynamics to account for these experimental observation. The model is based on the simplifying assumption that the actin cytoskeleton is composed of two distinct network types, a dendritic and a bundled network. The two structurally different states that were observed in experiments correspond to the stable fixed points in the bistable regime of this model. Each fixed point is dominated by one of the two network types. The experimentally observed actin waves can be considered as trigger waves that propagate transitions between the two stable fixed points
Spontaneous Segregation of Self-Propelled Particles with Different Motilities
We study mixtures of self-propelled and passive rod-like particles in two
dimensions using Brownian dynamics simulations. The simulations demonstrate
that the two species spontaneously segregate to generate a rich array of
dynamical domain structures whose properties depend on the propulsion velocity,
density, and composition. In addition to presenting phase diagrams as a
function of the system parameters, we investigate the mechanisms driving
segregation. We show that the difference in collision frequencies between
self-propelled and passive rods provides a driving force for segregation, which
is amplified by the tendency of the self-propelled rods to swarm or cluster.
Finally, both self-propelled and passive rods exhibit giant number fluctuations
for sufficient propulsion velocities.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, 5 movies available on Data Conservancy; added
references, replaced supplemental figure, added smaller movie
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