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Characterizing cytoquakes, heavy-tailed fluctuations in the actomyosin cortex, using super-resolved micropost arrays

ORAL

Abstract

The dynamics of the actomyosin network are responsible for a wide range of cellular behavior. The cellular cortex exhibits active fluctuations punctuated by rearrangements with large step-like displacements, termed “cytoquakes,” that show heavy-tailed distributions, and spatial and temporal correlations resembling those of earthquakes and avalanches [1].  Using high-resolution measurements of fluctuations in the cortex via arrays of flexible microposts, we find that the distributions of sizes of these cortical fluctuations are well-modeled by exponentially truncated Lévy distributions for multiple cell types and substrate stiffnesses. The tail exponent of these distributions, which governs their shape, exhibits a clear dependence on the time scale (lag time) of the measurements even when perturbations due to noise in the measurements are accounted for. The results suggest that cortical fluctuations over a wide range of time scales are the result of a single physical process, of which cytoquakes are the largest component.

[1] Y. Shi et al., PNAS 116, 13189 (2019).

Publication: Submitted to Integrative Biology.

Presenters

  • Shankar N Sivarajan

    Johns Hopkins University

Authors

  • Shankar N Sivarajan

    Johns Hopkins University

  • Yu Shi

    Johns Hopkins University

  • Katherine M Xiang

    Johns Hopkins University

  • John C Crocker

    University of Pennsylvania

  • Daniel H Reich

    Johns Hopkins University