The cytoskeleton provides eukaryotic cells with mechanical support and helps
them perform their biological functions. It is a network of semiflexible polar
protein filaments and many accessory proteins that bind to these filaments,
regulate their assembly, link them to organelles and continuously remodel the
network. Here we review recent theoretical work that aims to describe the
cytoskeleton as a polar continuum driven out of equilibrium by internal
chemical reactions. This work uses methods from soft condensed matter physics
and has led to the formulation of a general framework for the description of
the structure and rheology of active suspension of polar filaments and
molecular motors.Comment: 30 pages, 5 figures. To appear in "Cell Motility", Peter Lenz, ed.
(Springer, New York, 2007