The cellular cytoskeleton relies on diverse populations of motors, filaments, and binding proteins acting in concert to enable nonequilibrium processes ranging from mitosis to chemotaxis. The cytoskeleton's versatile reconfigurability, programmed by interactions between its constituents, makes it a foundational active matter platform. However, current active matter endeavors are limited largely to single force-generating components acting on a single substrate-far from the composite cytoskeleton in cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe composite cytoskeleton, comprising interacting networks of semiflexible actin and rigid microtubules, generates forces and restructures by using motor proteins such as myosins to enable key processes including cell motility and mitosis. Yet, how motor-driven activity alters the mechanics of cytoskeleton composites remains an open challenge. Here, we perform optical tweezers microrheology and confocal imaging of composites with varying actin-tubulin molar percentages (25-75, 50-50, and 75-25), driven by light-activated myosin II motors, to show that motor activity increases the elastic plateau modulus by over 2 orders of magnitude by active restructuring of both actin and microtubules that persists for hours after motor activation has ceased.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe cytoskeleton is a model active matter system that controls processes as diverse as cell motility and mechanosensing. While both active actomyosin dynamics and actin-microtubule interactions are key to the cytoskeleton's versatility and adaptability, an understanding of their interplay is lacking. Here, we couple microscale experiments with mechanistic modeling to elucidate how connectivity, rigidity, and force-generation affect emergent material properties in composite networks of actin, tubulin, and myosin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMedium-sized mammalian predators (i.e. mesopredators) on islands are known to have devastating effects on the abundance and diversity of terrestrial vertebrates.
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