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Energetics of Cytoskeletal Gel Contraction

Authors :
Ferraresso, Matteo
Kong, Albert
Hasan, Mehadi
Elfring, Gwynn J.
Agostinelli, Daniele
Bacca, Mattia
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Cytoskeletal gels are prototyped to reproduce the mechanical contraction of the cytoskeleton in-vitro. They are composed of a polymer network (backbone), swollen by the presence of a liquid solvent, and active molecules (molecular motors, MMs) that transduce chemical energy into the mechanical work of contraction. These motors attach to the polymer chains to shorten them and/or act as dynamic crosslinks, thereby constraining the thermal fluctuation of the chains. We describe both mechanisms thermodynamically as a microstructural reconfiguration, where the backbone stiffens to motivate solvent (out)flow and accommodate contraction. Via simple steady-state energetic analysis, under the simplest case of isotropic contraction, we quantify the mechanical energy required to achieve contraction as a function of polymer chain density and molecular motor density. We identify two limit cases, (fm) fast MM activation for which MMs provide all the available mechanical energy instantaneously and leave the polymer in a stiffened state, i.e. their activity occurs at a time scale that is much smaller than solvent diffusion, and (sm) slow MM activation for which the MM activation timescale is much longer. To achieve the same final contracted state, fm requires the largest amount of work per unit reference volume, while sm requires the least. For all intermediate cases where the timescale of MM activation is comparable with that of solvent flow, the required work ranges between the two cases. We provide all these quantities as a function of chain density and MM density. Finally, we compare our results with experiments and observe good agreement.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2211.10021
Document Type :
Working Paper