Publication | Open Access
Emergent properties of composite semiflexible biopolymer networks
41
Citations
31
References
2014
Year
Emergent PropertiesEngineeringVimentin IfPolymer ScienceBiomechanicsMacromolecular SystemSemiflexible PolymersInterpenetrating Polymer NetworkCell MotilityCell BiomechanicsCytoskeletonBiomedical EngineeringSoft MatterMedicineBiophysicsBulk Rheology
The semiflexible polymers filamentous actin (F-actin) and intermediate filaments (IF) both form complex networks within the cell, and together are key determinants of cellular stiffness. While the mechanics of F-actin networks together with stiff microtubules have been characterized, the interplay between F-actin and IF networks is largely unknown, necessitating the study of composite networks using mixtures of semiflexible biopolymers. We employ bulk rheology in a simplified in vitro system to uncover the fundamental mechanical interactions between networks of the 2 semiflexible polymers, F-actin and vimentin IF. Surprisingly, co-polymerization of actin and vimentin can produce composite networks either stronger or weaker than pure F-actin networks. We show that this effect occurs through steric constraints imposed by IF on F-actin during network formation and filament crosslinking, highlighting novel emergent behavior in composite semiflexible networks.
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