Filament Nucleation Tunes Mechanical Memory in Active Polymer Networks

ORAL

Abstract

Incorporating growth into contemporary material functionality presents a grand challenge in materials design. The F-actin cytoskeleton is an active polymer network which serves as the scaffolding for eukaryotic cells, growing and remodeling in order to determine changes in cell shape. Nucleated from the membrane, filaments polymerize and grow into a dense network whose dynamics of assembly and disassembly, or ‘turnover’, coordinates both fluidity and rigidity. Here, we vary the extent of F-actin nucleation from a membrane surface in a biomimetic model of the cytoskeleton. We find that nucleation of F-actin mediates the accumulation and dissipation of polymerization-induced F-actin bending energy. At high and low nucleation, bending energies are low and easily relaxed yielding an isotropic material. However, at an intermediate critical nucleation, stresses are not relaxed by turnover and the internal energy accumulates 100-fold. In this case, high filament curvatures template further assembly of F-actin, driving the formation and stabilization of vortex-like topological defects. Thus, nucleation coordinates mechanical and chemical timescales to encode shape memory into active materials.

*ARO MURI W911NF-14-1-0403, CMMI-1525316, NIH RO1 GM126256, U54 CA209992, HFSP RGY0073/2018

Presenters

  • Vikrant Yadav

    • Yale University
    • Biomedical Engineering, Yale University

Authors

  • Vikrant Yadav

    • Yale University
    • Biomedical Engineering, Yale University
  • Deb Sankar Banerjee

    • Physics, Carnegie Mellon University
  • Alan Tabatabai

    • Seattle University
    • Yale University
    • Biomedical Engineering, Yale University
  • David R Kovar

    • Department of Molecular Genetics and Cell Biology, University of Chicago
    • Division of Biological Sciences, University of Chicago
  • Taeyoon Kim

    • Biomedical Engineering, Purdue University
  • Shiladitya Banerjee

    • Carnegie Mellon University
    • Physics, Carnegie Mellon
    • Physics, Carnegie Mellon University
  • Michael Murrell

    • Yale University
    • Biomedical Engineering, Yale University