Published February 2, 2024 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Motor crosslinking augments elasticity in active nematics

Description

In active materials, uncoordinated internal stresses lead to emergent long-range flows. An understanding of how the behavior of active materials depends on mesoscopic (hydrodynamic) parameters is developing, but there remains a gap in knowledge concerning how hydrodynamic parameters depend on the properties of microscopic elements. In this work, we combine experiments and multiscale modeling to relate the structure and dynamics of active nematics composed of biopolymer filaments and molecular motors to their microscopic properties, in particular motor processivity, speed, and valency. We show that crosslinking of filaments by both motors and passive crosslinkers not only augments the contributions to nematic elasticity from excluded volume effects but dominates them. By altering motor kinetics we show that a competition between motor speed and crosslinking results in a nonmonotonic dependence of nematic flow on motor speed. By modulating passive filament crosslinking we show that energy transfer into nematic flow is in large part dictated by crosslinking. Thus motor proteins both generate activity and contribute to nematic elasticity. Our results provide new insights for rationally engineering active materials.

Files

Motor-crosslinking-augments-elasticity-in-active-nematics.pdf

Files (35.7 MB)

Name Size Download all
Article
md5:d407e0c0782a7510212a7d166fb0eb59
4.1 MB Preview Download
md5:ca93adc961fcf13f583454a6cb4f102b
31.6 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1039/D3SM01176C
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:11449

Funding

National Science Foundation
DMR-2011854
National Science Foundation
DMR-2215605
National Institutes of Health
R01GM143792
National Science Foundation
MCB-2201235
National Institutes of Health
R01GM114627
National Institutes of Health
T32 EB009412

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division, Physical Sciences Division, Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering
Department(s)
Biophysical Sciences, Chemistry, Physics
Center(s) or Institute(s)
Institute for Biophysical Dynamics, James Franck Institute