4.6 Article

Actin filament alignment causes mechanical hysteresis in cross-linked networks

期刊

SOFT MATTER
卷 17, 期 22, 页码 5499-5507

出版社

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1sm00412c

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资金

  1. University of Chicago Materials Research Science and Engineering Center - National Science Foundation [DMR-1420709, DMR-2011854]
  2. NSF [DMR-1905675]
  3. NIH [R35 GM136381]
  4. NIH National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering Training grant [T32EB009412]

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Cells dynamically control their material properties through remodeling the actin cytoskeleton, with the mechanical adaptation of the cytoskeleton understanding through reconstituted actin filament networks. Tuning the concentration and mechanical properties of cross-linking proteins in these networks can affect mechanical hysteresis, with a peak observed at moderate concentrations. The effect of changing cross-linker properties, such as longer or more flexible cross-linkers, can enhance hysteresis, regardless of the concentration or physical properties of the cross-linkers, as shown by plotting hysteresis against alignment after training.
Cells dynamically control their material properties through remodeling of the actin cytoskeleton, an assembly of cross-linked networks and bundles formed from the biopolymer actin. We recently found that cross-linked networks of actin filaments reconstituted in vitro can exhibit adaptive behavior and thus serve as a model system to understand the underlying mechanisms of mechanical adaptation of the cytoskeleton. In these networks, training, in the form of applied shear stress, can induce asymmetry in the nonlinear elasticity. Here, we explore control over this mechanical hysteresis by tuning the concentration and mechanical properties of cross-linking proteins in both experimental and simulated networks. We find that this effect depends on two conditions: the initial network must exhibit nonlinear strain stiffening, and filaments in the network must be able to reorient during training. Hysteresis depends strongly and non-monotonically on cross-linker concentration, with a peak at moderate concentrations. In contrast, at low concentrations, where the network does not strain stiffen, or at high concentrations, where filaments are less able to rearrange, there is little response to training. Additionally, we investigate the effect of changing cross-linker properties and find that longer or more flexible cross-linkers enhance hysteresis. Remarkably plotting hysteresis against alignment after training yields a single curve regardless of the physical properties or concentration of the cross-linkers.

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