We describe an active polymer network in which processive molecular motors control network elasticity. This system consists of actin filaments cross-linked by filamin A (FLNa) and contracted by bipolar filaments of muscle myosin II. The myosin motors stiffen the network by more than two orders of magnitude by pulling on actin filaments anchored in the network by FLNa cross-links, thereby generating internal stress. The stiffening response closely mimics the effects of external stress applied by mechanical shear. Both internal and external stresses can drive the network into a highly nonlinear, stiffened regime. The active stress reaches values that are equivalent to an external stress of 14 Pa, consistent with a 1-pN force per myosin head. ...
Stiffening due to internal stress generation is of paramount importance in living systems and is the...
Stiffening due to internal stress generation is of paramount importance in living systems and is the...
Our cells, muscles, and connective tissue owe their remarkable mechanical properties to biopolymer n...
We describe an active polymer network in which processive molecular motors control network elasticit...
Reconstituted filamentous actin networks with myosin motor proteins form active gels, in which motor...
Strain stiffening induced by molecular motors in active crosslinked biopolymer networks magnitudewhe...
We have studied the elastic response of actin networks with both compliant and rigid crosslinks by m...
Living systems naturally exhibit internal driving: active, molecular processes drive non-equilibrium...
Stiffening due to internal stress generation is of paramount importance in living systems and is the...
Cells modulate themselves in response to the surrounding environment like substrate elasticity, exhi...
Presented on April 16, 2012 from 3:00 pm to 4:00 pm in Room 1116 of the Marcus Nanotechnology buildi...
Cells both actively generate and sensitively react to forces through their mechanical framework, the...
Molecular motor regulated active contractile force is key for cells sensing and responding to their ...
Contractility in animal cells is often generated by molecular motors such as myosin, which require p...
The mechanical properties of cells and the extracellular environment they reside in are governed by ...
Stiffening due to internal stress generation is of paramount importance in living systems and is the...
Stiffening due to internal stress generation is of paramount importance in living systems and is the...
Our cells, muscles, and connective tissue owe their remarkable mechanical properties to biopolymer n...
We describe an active polymer network in which processive molecular motors control network elasticit...
Reconstituted filamentous actin networks with myosin motor proteins form active gels, in which motor...
Strain stiffening induced by molecular motors in active crosslinked biopolymer networks magnitudewhe...
We have studied the elastic response of actin networks with both compliant and rigid crosslinks by m...
Living systems naturally exhibit internal driving: active, molecular processes drive non-equilibrium...
Stiffening due to internal stress generation is of paramount importance in living systems and is the...
Cells modulate themselves in response to the surrounding environment like substrate elasticity, exhi...
Presented on April 16, 2012 from 3:00 pm to 4:00 pm in Room 1116 of the Marcus Nanotechnology buildi...
Cells both actively generate and sensitively react to forces through their mechanical framework, the...
Molecular motor regulated active contractile force is key for cells sensing and responding to their ...
Contractility in animal cells is often generated by molecular motors such as myosin, which require p...
The mechanical properties of cells and the extracellular environment they reside in are governed by ...
Stiffening due to internal stress generation is of paramount importance in living systems and is the...
Stiffening due to internal stress generation is of paramount importance in living systems and is the...
Our cells, muscles, and connective tissue owe their remarkable mechanical properties to biopolymer n...