4.8 Article

Active nematic order and dynamic lane formation of microtubules driven by membrane-bound diffusing motors

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2117107118

Keywords

active matter; liquid crystal; active nematic; biopolymers

Funding

  1. NSF MRI Award [DMR-1625733]
  2. NSF [ACI-1429783]
  3. NSF-CREST: Center for Cellular and Biomolecular Machines at the University of California, Merced [HRD-1547848]
  4. Brandeis Biomaterials Facility [DMR-2011486]
  5. Hellman Fellows Fund
  6. [DMR-1808926]
  7. [DMS-1616926]
  8. [CMMI-1548571]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study demonstrates the formation of dynamic lanes and long-range active nematic alignment by directly coupling kinesin motors to a lipid bilayer during microtubule gliding. The lipid membrane promotes filament-filament alignment and enhances globally aligned active nematic state formation.
Dynamic lane formation and long-range active nematic alignment are reported using a geometry in which kinesin motors are directly coupled to a lipid bilayer, allowing for in-plane motor diffusion during microtubule gliding. We use fluorescence microscopy to image protein distributions in and below the dense two-dimensional microtubule layer, revealing evidence of diffusion-enabled kinesin restructuring within the fluid membrane substrate as microtubules collectively glide above. We find that the lipid membrane acts to promote filament-filament alignment within the gliding layer, enhancing the formation of a globally aligned active nematic state. We also report the emergence of an intermediate, locally ordered state in which apolar dynamic lanes of nematically aligned microtubules migrate across the substrate. To understand this emergent behavior, we implement a continuum model obtained from coarse graining a collection of self-propelled rods, with propulsion set by the local motor kinetics. Tuning the microtubule and kinesin concentrations as well as active propulsion in these simulations reveals that increasing motor activity promotes dynamic nematic lane formation. Simulations and experiments show that, following fluid bilayer substrate mediated spatial motor restructuring, the total motor concentration becomes enriched below the microtubule lanes that they drive, with the feedback leading to more dynamic lanes. Our results have implications for membrane-coupled active nematics in vivo as well as for engineering dynamic and reconfigurable materials where the structural elements and power sources can dynamically colocalize, enabling efficient mechanical work.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available