Inhalt des Dokuments
How Actin Polymerization Provides Force to Move Cells and Change Their Shape
[1]
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Lecturer:
Prof. Anders
Carlsson (Washington University in St. Louis)
Dates:
October 17 and 24, 2016
Time:
Mondays: 10:15 - 11:45
Place:
EW 202 (TU Berlin, EW-building)
Course Outline
The functions of biological cells are driven by
complex networks of proteins and other key molecules. Most theoretical
analysis of such networks has been based on a purely chemical picture,
but it is becoming increasingly clear that mechanical force is a key
input into the network behavior. The intracellular protein actin is
one of the key force-producing agents in the cell. It can polymerize
into semiflexible filaments, which can propel a cell forward and
change its shape. The lectures will present key experimental and
biological background, demonstrate using a variety of theoretical
tools how actin can generate pushing forces, describe how force
generation by actin is regulated from upstream, and finally show how
actin-based force generation drives endocytosis.
I) Observational background
A) Cell migration
B) Propulsion of
pathogens
C) Cell shape changes
D)
Measurements of actin-based forces
II) Theory of pushing
force generation by actin polymerization
A) Molecular properties of actin
B)
Equilibrium and nonequilibrium polymerization
C)
Rigorous properties of equilibrium actin force generation
D) Brownian-Ratchet model
E) Effects
of filament/membrane flexibility
F) Multifilament
effects
G) Nonequilibrium force generation
III) Control of actin-based force generation
A) Actin filament nucleation
B)
Feedback of actin onto its nucleators
C) Actin
waves
D) Actin pulses in endocytosis
IV)
Theory of pulling force generation by actin polymerization
A) Implications of force balance
B)
How actin polymerization drives endocytosis
Recommended literature
- J. Howard, Mechanics of Motor Proteins and the Cytoskeleton, Chapters 1-11, Sinauer (2001).
- A. Mogilner, Mathematics of cell motility: have we got its number?, J. Math. Biol. 58, 105-134 (2009).
- A. E. Carlsson and D. Sept, Mathematical modeling of cell migration, Methods in cell biology 84, 911-937 (2008).
lssonLectures2016/vlPlak_carlsson_16.pdf