Kinesin-driven microtubule flows drive elastic structural transitions in actin networks
ORAL
Abstract
Active materials organize not just themselves but also their environment. Here, we describe how active consituents of a cytoskeletal composite material are reorganized into a steady-state structure through the action of molecular motors. We use fast-scanning three-dimensional confocal microscopy to directly image, at the resolution of single filaments, a network of actin as it undergoes structural reorganization due to the flow of kinesin-driven microtubule bundles. We examine the connected network structure as it evolves and connect structural transitions to changes in the elasticity of the network. Such work provides a basis for understanding how active fluids can sculpt passive materials into structures inaccessible via other means of construction.
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Presenters
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John P Berezney
Brandeis University
Authors
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John P Berezney
Brandeis University
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Itamar Kolvin
University of California, Santa Barbara
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Seth Fraden
Brandeis University, Brandeis Univ, Department of Physics & MRSEC, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA
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Zvonimir Dogic
University of California, Santa Barbara