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Active restructuring of cytoskeleton composites leads to increased mechanical stiffness, memory, and heterogeneity

Authors :
Sheung, Janet Y.
Achiriloaie, Daisy H.
Peddireddy, Karthik
Lee, Gloria
Rust, Michael J.
Das, Moumita
Ross, Jennifer L.
Robertson-Anderson, Rae M.
Source :
ACS Macro Lett. 2021, 10, 9 1151-1158
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The composite cytoskeleton, comprising interacting networks of semiflexible actin and rigid microtubules, actively generates forces and restructures using motor proteins such as myosins to enable key mechanical 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 on actin-microtubule composites driven by myosin II motors to show that motor activity increases the linear viscoelasticity and elastic storage of the composite by active restructuring to a network of tightly-packed filament clusters and bundles. Our nonlinear microrheology measurements performed hours after cessation of activity show that the motor-contracted structure is stable and robust to nonlinear forcing. Unique features of the nonlinear response include increased mechanical stiffness, memory and heterogeneity, coupled with suppressed filament bending following motor-driven restructuring. Our results shed important new light onto the interplay between viscoelasticity and non-equilibrium dynamics in active polymer composites such as the cytoskeleton.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
ACS Macro Lett. 2021, 10, 9 1151-1158
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2105.02973
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsmacrolett.1c00500