Motor-free contractility of active biopolymer networks

Phys Rev E. 2023 Oct;108(4-1):044405. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevE.108.044405.

Abstract

Contractility in animal cells is often generated by molecular motors such as myosin, which require polar substrates for their function. Motivated by recent experimental evidence of motor-independent contractility, we propose a robust motor-free mechanism that can generate contraction in biopolymer networks without the need for substrate polarity. We show that contractility is a natural consequence of active binding-unbinding of crosslinkers that breaks the principle of detailed balance, together with the asymmetric force-extension response of semiflexible biopolymers. We have extended our earlier work to discuss the motor-free contraction of viscoelastic biopolymer networks. We calculate the resulting contractile velocity using a microscopic model and show that it can be reduced to a simple coarse-grained model under certain limits. Our model may provide an explanation of recent reports of motor-independent contractility in cells. Our results also suggest a mechanism for generating contractile forces in synthetic active materials.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Biopolymers
  • Models, Biological*
  • Muscle Contraction
  • Myosins*

Substances

  • Myosins
  • Biopolymers