Cell size regulation arises from physical manifestations of cell proliferation and metabolic pathways. On one hand, coordination between these systems yields a constant cell size over generations to maintain cell size homeostasis. However, active regulation of cell size is crucial to physiology and to establish broad variation of cell sizes within an individual organism, and is accomplished via physical and biochemical pathways modulated by myriad intrinsic and extrinsic cues.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEndothelial tissues are essential mechanosensors in the vasculature and facilitate adaptation to various blood flow-induced mechanical cues. Defects in endothelial mechanoresponses can perturb tissue remodelling and functions leading to cardiovascular disease progression. In this context, the precise mechanisms of endothelial mechanoresponses contributing to normal and diseased tissue functioning remain elusive.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActin filament networks are exposed to mechanical stimuli, but the effect of strain on actin filament structure has not been well established in molecular detail. This is a critical gap in understanding because the activity of a variety of actin-binding proteins has recently been determined to be altered by actin filament strain. We therefore used all-atom molecular dynamics simulations to apply tensile strains to actin filaments and find that changes in actin subunit organization are minimal in mechanically strained, but intact, actin filaments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn active materials, uncoordinated internal stresses lead to emergent long-range flows. An understanding of how the behavior of active materials depends on mesoscopic (hydrodynamic) parameters is developing, but there remains a gap in knowledge concerning how hydrodynamic parameters depend on the properties of microscopic elements. In this work, we combine experiments and multiscale modeling to relate the structure and dynamics of active nematics composed of biopolymer filaments and molecular motors to their microscopic properties, in particular motor processivity, speed, and valency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCellular form and function emerge from complex mechanochemical systems within the cytoplasm. Currently, no systematic strategy exists to infer large-scale physical properties of a cell from its molecular components. This is an obstacle to understanding processes such as cell adhesion and migration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF