Issue 40, 2017

Scale dependence of the mechanics of active gels with increasing motor concentration

Abstract

Actin is a protein that plays an essential role in maintaining the mechanical integrity of cells. In response to strong external stresses, it can assemble into large bundles, but it grows into a fine branched network to induce cell motion. In some cases, the self-organization of actin fibers and networks involves the action of bipolar filaments of the molecular motor myosin. Such self-organization processes mediated by large myosin bipolar filaments have been studied extensively in vitro. Here we create active gels, composed of single actin filaments and small myosin bipolar filaments. The active steady state in these gels persists long enough to enable the characterization of their mechanical properties using one and two point microrheology. We study the effect of myosin concentration on the mechanical properties of this model system for active matter, for two different motor assembly sizes. In contrast to previous studies of networks with large motor assemblies, we find that the fluctuations of tracer particles embedded in the network decrease in amplitude as motor concentration increases. Nonetheless, we show that myosin motors stiffen the actin networks, in accordance with bulk rheology measurements of networks containing larger motor assemblies. This implies that such stiffening is of universal nature and may be relevant to a wider range of cytoskeleton-based structures.

Graphical abstract: Scale dependence of the mechanics of active gels with increasing motor concentration

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
13 Jul 2017
Accepted
17 Sep 2017
First published
18 Sep 2017

Soft Matter, 2017,13, 7352-7359

Scale dependence of the mechanics of active gels with increasing motor concentration

A. Sonn-Segev, A. Bernheim-Groswasser and Y. Roichman, Soft Matter, 2017, 13, 7352 DOI: 10.1039/C7SM01391D

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