Maximal entropy production rates in non-contractile actomyosin

ORAL

Abstract

The actin cytoskeleton is an active semi-flexible polymer network whose non-equilibrium properties coordinate both stable and contractile behaviors to maintain or change cell shape. While myosin motors drive the actin cytoskeleton out-of-equilibrium, the role of myosin-driven active stresses in stable states of actomyosin is unclear. To investigate this, we synthesize an actomyosin material in vitro whose active stress content can tune the network from stable to contractile and analyze the resulting filament dynamics using the framework of stochastic thermodynamics. We find that the entropy production rate does not increase monotonically with myosin content, but instead is maximized in a non-contractile, stable state. Our study provides evidence that the origins of system entropy production and activity-dependent dissipation relate to disorder in the molecular interactions between actin and myosin.

*DSS acknowledges support from NSF Fellowship grant # DGE1122492. MM acknowledges funding from NSF CMMI-1525316, ARO MURI W911NF-14-1-0403, NIH RO1 GM126256, and NIH U54 CA209992. SB acknowledges Strategic Fellowship support from the University College London, and funding from Royal Society and Tata grant # URF\R1\180187.

Presenters

  • Daniel S. Seara

    • Yale Univ

Authors

  • Daniel S. Seara

    • Yale Univ
  • Vikrant Yadav

    • Yale Univ
  • Ian Linsmeier

    • Yale Univ
  • Pasha Tabatabai

    • Yale Univ
  • Patrick W. Oakes

    • University of Rochester
  • Ali Tabei

    • University of Northern Iowa
  • Shiladitya Banerjee

    • University College London
  • Michael Murrell

    • Yale Univ
    • Yale University