Kinesin motors can
induce a buckling instability in a microtubule
with a fixed minus end. Here we show that by modifying the surface
with a protein-repellent functionalization and using clusters of kinesin
motors, the microtubule can exhibit persistent oscillatory motion
resembling the beating of sperm flagella. The observed period is of
the order of 1 min. From the experimental images we theoretically
determine a distribution of motor forces that explains the observed
shapes using a maximum likelihood approach. A good agreement is achieved
with a small number of motor clusters acting simultaneously on a microtubule.
The tangential forces exerted by a cluster are mostly in the range
0–8 pN toward the microtubule minus end, indicating the action
of 1 or 2 kinesin motors. The lateral forces are distributed symmetrically
and mainly below 10 pN, while the lateral velocity has a strong peak
around zero. Unlike well-known models for flapping filaments, kinesins
are found to have a strong “pinning” effect on the beating
filaments. Our results suggest new strategies to utilize molecular
motors in dynamic roles that depend sensitively on the stress built-up
in the system.
How mechanical unfolding of proteins has a functional role in vivo is still poorly understood. In this review, we distill the main biophysical characteristics of multidomain proteins functioning under force as binary molecular computational units and examine them as part of several biological processes. Understanding the relation between molecular unfolding of proteins under force and their overall macroscopic impact can provide insight into novel mechanical signaling pathways and gain‐of‐function mechanisms.
Active networks of biopolymers and motor proteins in vitro self-organize and exhibit dynamic structures on length scales much larger than the interacting individual components of which they consist. How the dynamics is related across the range of length scales is still an open question. Here, we experimentally characterize and quantify the dynamic behavior of isolated microtubule bundles that bend due to the activity of motor proteins. At the motor level, we track and describe the motion features of kinesin-1 clusters stepping within the bending bundles. We find that there is a separation of length scales by at least 1 order of magnitude. At a run length of <1 μm, kinesin-1 activity leads to a bundle curvature in the range of tens of micrometers. We propose that the distribution of microtubule polarity plays a crucial role in the bending dynamics that we observe at both the bundle and motor levels. Our results contribute to the understanding of fundamental principles of vital intracellular processes by disentangling the multiscale dynamics in out-of-equilibrium active networks composed of cytoskeletal elements.
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