4.6 Article

Active cytoskeletal composites display emergent tunable contractility and restructuring

Journal

SOFT MATTER
Volume 17, Issue 47, Pages 10765-10776

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1sm01083b

Keywords

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Funding

  1. William M. Keck Foundation Research Grant
  2. National Institutes of Health R15 Award (National Institute of General Medical Sciences) [R15GM123420]
  3. National Science Foundation Award (NSF Biomaterials award) [1808026]
  4. Division Of Materials Research
  5. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [1808026] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This study combines microscale experiments with mechanistic modeling to investigate how connectivity, rigidity, and force-generation affect emergent material properties in composite networks of actin, tubulin, and myosin in the cytoskeleton. The research reveals that percolated actomyosin networks are essential for contraction, and a critical fraction of microtubules is necessary to sustain controlled dynamics. The comprehensive phase map presented not only provides important insight into different routes the cytoskeleton can use to alter its dynamics and structure, but also serves as a blueprint for designing cytoskeleton-inspired materials with tunability, resilience, and adaptability for diverse applications.
The cytoskeleton is a model active matter system that controls processes as diverse as cell motility and mechanosensing. While both active actomyosin dynamics and actin-microtubule interactions are key to the cytoskeleton's versatility and adaptability, an understanding of their interplay is lacking. Here, we couple microscale experiments with mechanistic modeling to elucidate how connectivity, rigidity, and force-generation affect emergent material properties in composite networks of actin, tubulin, and myosin. We use multi-spectral imaging, time-resolved differential dynamic microscopy and spatial image autocorrelation to show that ballistic contraction occurs in composites with sufficient flexibility and motor density, but that a critical fraction of microtubules is necessary to sustain controlled dynamics. The active double-network models we develop, which recapitulate our experimental findings, reveal that while percolated actomyosin networks are essential for contraction, only composites with comparable actin and microtubule densities can simultaneously resist mechanical stresses while supporting substantial restructuring. The comprehensive phase map we present not only provides important insight into the different routes the cytoskeleton can use to alter its dynamics and structure, but also serves as a much-needed blueprint for designing cytoskeleton-inspired materials that couple tunability with resilience and adaptability for diverse applications ranging from wound healing to soft robotics.

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