Many cytoskeletal biopolymers are “active,” consuming energy in large quantities. In this Letter, we identify a fundamental difference between active polymers and passive, equilibrium polymers: for equal mean lengths, active polymers can reorganize faster than equilibrium polymers. We show that equilibrium polymers are intrinsically limited to linear scaling between mean lifetime (or mean first-passage time, or MFPT) and mean length, MFPT ∼ ⟨ L ⟩ , by analogy to 1D Potts models. By contrast, we present a simple active-polymer model that improves upon this scaling, such that MFPT ∼ ⟨ L ⟩ 1 / 2 . Since, to be biologically useful, structural biopolymers must typically be many monomers long yet respond dynamically to the needs ...
Cytoskeletal filaments are capable of self-assembly in the absence of externally supplied chemical e...
We consider the statistical mechanics of a full set of two-dimensional protein-like heteropolymers,...
Active matter agents consume internal energy or extract energy from the environment for locomotion a...
Living polymers are formed by reversible association of primary units (unimers). Generally the chain...
Compared to the understandings of equilibrium state , litle is known about polymers far from equilib...
In a previous paper, bioenergetic aspects of head-to-tail polymerization for a two-state actin ATPas...
We study theoretically the dynamics of living polymers which can add and subtract monomer units at t...
AbstractActive fluctuations, driven by processes that consume ATP, are prevalent in living cells and...
Self-assembling, semi-flexible polymers are ubiquitous in biology and technology. However, conflicti...
We study conformations and dynamics of active star polymers. The analysis shows that active star pol...
We perform numerical simulations of isolated, partially active polymers, driven out-of-equilibrium b...
Introduction and overview Living cells are soft bodies of a characteristic form, but endowed with a...
Biopolymer self-assembly pathways are complicated by the ability of their monomeric subunits to adop...
The quantitative description of polymeric systems requires hierarchical modeling schemes, which brid...
Chaperones are binding proteins working as a driving force in biopolymer translocation. They bind to...
Cytoskeletal filaments are capable of self-assembly in the absence of externally supplied chemical e...
We consider the statistical mechanics of a full set of two-dimensional protein-like heteropolymers,...
Active matter agents consume internal energy or extract energy from the environment for locomotion a...
Living polymers are formed by reversible association of primary units (unimers). Generally the chain...
Compared to the understandings of equilibrium state , litle is known about polymers far from equilib...
In a previous paper, bioenergetic aspects of head-to-tail polymerization for a two-state actin ATPas...
We study theoretically the dynamics of living polymers which can add and subtract monomer units at t...
AbstractActive fluctuations, driven by processes that consume ATP, are prevalent in living cells and...
Self-assembling, semi-flexible polymers are ubiquitous in biology and technology. However, conflicti...
We study conformations and dynamics of active star polymers. The analysis shows that active star pol...
We perform numerical simulations of isolated, partially active polymers, driven out-of-equilibrium b...
Introduction and overview Living cells are soft bodies of a characteristic form, but endowed with a...
Biopolymer self-assembly pathways are complicated by the ability of their monomeric subunits to adop...
The quantitative description of polymeric systems requires hierarchical modeling schemes, which brid...
Chaperones are binding proteins working as a driving force in biopolymer translocation. They bind to...
Cytoskeletal filaments are capable of self-assembly in the absence of externally supplied chemical e...
We consider the statistical mechanics of a full set of two-dimensional protein-like heteropolymers,...
Active matter agents consume internal energy or extract energy from the environment for locomotion a...