|
Finding About Cellular Microtubule
Rigidity Could Lead to Development of New Nanomaterials
Microtubules, essential structural elements
in living cells, grow stiffer as they grow longer, an
unexpected property that could lead to advances in nano-materials
development, an international team of biophysicists
has found.
"We found that the microtubules grow stiffer as
they grow longer, a very unusual and surprising result,"
said Ernst-Ludwig Florin, assistant professor with the
Center of Nonlinear Dynamics at The University of Texas
at Austin. "This will have a big impact on our
understanding of how microtubules function in the cell
and on advancing materials research.
"To my knowledge, no manmade material has this
property--to become stiffer as it elongates," said
Florin. "This research could lead to the design
of novel materials based on this biological structure."
Microtubules, which are about 25 nanometers in diameter,
play an essential role in many cellular processes, acting
as girders of support for the cell and tracks along
which organelles--structures in cells that perform specialized
functions--can move. They are also essential components
of flagella and cilia, the extensions of some cells
that give them movement.
Florin and his colleagues measured the stiffness and
length of cellular microtubules using a "single-particle
tracking" technique. They attached yellow-green
fluorescent beads to the tips of microtubules of various
lengths and measured the position of the bead by analyzing
frame-by-frame videos of the beads moving in solution.
(The beads were 250 or 500 nanometers in diameter.)
The changes in the beads' position were used to calculate
the stiffness of the filaments they were attached to,
through a method recently developed by the theoretical
physicists on the research team.
To the surprise of the scientists, they found that the
longer the filament, the more rigid it became.
Florin and his coauthors attribute the microtubules'
unique properties to their molecular architecture. The
nanometer-sized filaments are hollow tubes made of tubulin
proteins that bind to each other in ways that give them
the ability to be both flexible and stiff. Flexibility
is important for microtubules as they grow and change
in cells, while rigidity is important when cells need
support.
"Microtubules are optimally designed to give the
maximum of mechanical performance at a minimum cost
for the cell," said Francesco Pampaloni, a physical
chemist at EMBL.
The new finding about the microtubules' properties could
provide insights into using the filaments as models
for the development of nano-materials.
Visit www.utexas.edu

|
|