Issue 25, 2019

Morphological transitions of axially-driven microfilaments

Abstract

The interactions of microtubules with motor proteins are ubiquitous in cellular and sub-cellular processes that involve motility and cargo transport. In vitro motility assays have demonstrated that motor-driven microtubules exhibit rich dynamical behaviors from straight to curved configurations. Here, we theoretically investigate the dynamic instabilities of elastic filaments, with free-ends, driven by single follower forces that emulate the action of molecular motors. Using the resistive force theory at low Reynolds number, and a combination of numerical techniques with linear stability analysis, we show the existence of four distinct regimes of filament behavior, including a novel buckled state with locked curvature. These successive instabilities recapitulate the full range of experimentally-observed microtubule behavior, implying that neither structural nor actuation asymmetry are needed to elicit this rich repertoire of motion.

Graphical abstract: Morphological transitions of axially-driven microfilaments

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
27 Nov 2018
Accepted
07 Jun 2019
First published
10 Jun 2019

Soft Matter, 2019,15, 5163-5173

Author version available

Morphological transitions of axially-driven microfilaments

Y. Man and E. Kanso, Soft Matter, 2019, 15, 5163 DOI: 10.1039/C8SM02397B

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