posted on 2019-11-14, 21:16authored bySylas
J. Anderson, Christelle Matsuda, Jonathan Garamella, Karthik Reddy Peddireddy, Rae M. Robertson-Anderson, Ryan McGorty
The diffusion of microscopic particles through the cell,
important
to processes such as viral infection, gene delivery, and vesicle transport,
is largely controlled by the complex cytoskeletal network, comprised
of semiflexible actin filaments and rigid microtubules, that pervades
the cytoplasm. By varying the relative concentrations of actin and
microtubules, the cytoskeleton can display a host of different structural
and dynamic properties that, in turn, impact the diffusion of particles
through the composite network. Here, we couple single-particle tracking
with differential dynamic microscopy to characterize the transport
of microsphere tracers diffusing through composite in vitro networks
with varying ratios of actin and microtubules. We analyze multiple
complementary metrics for anomalous transport to show that particles
exhibit anomalous subdiffusion in all networks, which our data suggest
arises from caging by networks. Further, subdiffusive characteristics
are markedly more pronounced in actin-rich networks, which exhibit
similarly more prominent viscoelastic properties compared to microtubule-rich
composites. While the smaller mesh size of actin-rich composites compared
to microtubule-rich composites plays an important role in these results,
the rigidity of the filaments comprising the network also influences
the anomalous characteristics that we observe. Our results suggest
that as microtubules in our composites are replaced with actin filaments,
the decreasing filament rigidity competes with increasing network
connectivity to drive anomalous transport.