Nowadays, biomolecular motor-based miniaturized lab-on-a-chip devices have been attracting much attention for their wide range of nanotechnological applications. Most of the applications are dependent on the motor-driven active transportation of their associated filamentous proteins as shuttles. Fluctuation in the movement of the shuttles is a major contributor to the dispersion in motor-driven active transportation, which limits the efficiency of the miniaturized devices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe biomolecular motor protein kinesin and its associated filamentous protein microtubule have been finding important nanotechnological applications in the recent years. Rigidity of the microtubules, which are propelled by kinesin motors in an gliding assay, is an important metric that determines the success of utilization of microtubules and kinesins in various applications, such as transportation, sensing, sorting, molecular robotics, etc. Therefore, regulating the rigidity of kinesin-propelled microtubules has been critical.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrimethylamine N-oxide is found to be effective in regulating the interaction between microtubules and kinesins over a wide temperature range. The lifetime of the motility of microtubules on kinesins at high temperatures is prolonged using trimethylamine N-oxide. The activation energy of microtubule motility is increased by trimethylamine N-oxide.
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