388 research outputs found

    Receptor-Mediated Endocytosis of a Cylindrical Nanoparticle in the Presence of Cytoskeleton Substrate

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    Internalization of particles by cells plays a crucial role for adsorbing nutrients and fighting infection. Endocytosis is one of the most important mechanisms of the particles uptake which encompass multiple pathways. Although endocytosis is a complex mechanism involving biochemical signaling and active force generation, the energetic cost associated to the large deformations of the cell membrane wrapping around the foreign particle is an important factor controlling this process, which can be studied using quantitative physical models. Of particular interest is the competition between membrane - cytoskeleton and membrane - target adhesion. Here, we explore the wrapping of a lipid membrane around a long cylindrical object in the presence of a substrate mimicking the cytoskeleton. Using discretization of the Helfrich elastic energy that accounts for the membrane bending rigidity and surface tension, we obtain a wrapping phase diagram as a function of the membrane-cytoskeleton and the membrane-target adhesion energy that includes unwrapped, partially wrapped and fully wrapped states. We provide an analytical expression for the boundary between the different regimes. While the transition to partial wrapping is independent of membrane tension, the transition to full wrapping is very much influenced by membrane tension. We also show that target wrapping may proceed in an asymmetric fashion in the full wrapping regime

    Theory of Nucleosome Corkscrew Sliding in the Presence of Synthetic DNA Ligands

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    Histone octamers show a heat-induced mobility along DNA. Recent theoretical studies have established two mechanisms that are qualitatively and quantitatively compatible with in vitro experiments on nucleosome sliding: Octamer repositiong through one-basepair twist defects and through ten-basepair bulge defects. A recent experiment demonstrated that the repositioning is strongly suppressed in the presence of minor-groove binding DNA ligands. In the present study we give a quantitative theory for nucleosome repositioning in the presence of such ligands. We show that the experimentally observed octamer mobilities are consistent with the picture of bound ligands blocking the passage of twist defects through the nucleosome. This strongly supports the model of twist defects inducing a corkscrew motion of the nucleosome as the underlying mechanism of nucleosome sliding. We provide a theoretical estimate of the nucleosomal mobility without adjustable parameters, as a function of ligand concentration, binding affinity, binding site orientiation, temperature and DNA anisotropy. Having this mobility at hand we speculate about the interaction between a nucleosome and a transcribing RNA polymerase and suggest a novel mechanism that might account for polymerase induced nucleosome repositioning.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figures, submitted to J. Mol. Bio

    Cyclodextrin Based Spectral Changes

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