PoC - Physics of Cancer - Annual Symposium
Poster, Friday, 19:00  
Dynamics of Intermediate Filaments Confined in Microchannels

Bernd Nöding, Sarah Köster

Institute for X-Ray Physics / Courant Research Centre "Nano-Spectroscopy and X-Ray Imaging", Georg August University of Göttingen, Germany

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The cytoskeleton of eukaryotes consists of three different polymer systems, microtubules, actin filaments and intermediate filaments. While both microtubules and actin filaments are highly conserved, intermediate filaments occur in many different variations. The mechanical rigidity of any of these polymers can be characterized by their persistence length LP. In the case of the intermediate filament protein vimentin, LP was found to be on the order of one micrometer using static measurement methods. Here, we perform dynamic measurements on fluorescently labeled intermediate filaments confined in microchannels, thereby realizing the Odijk confinement regime. Since intermediate filaments can be classified as semiflexible polymers (L ~ LP) we assume the worm-like chain model for the fluctuation analysis. The channel walls are included as a parabolic potential in our calculations. The interaction of the filament and the confining microchannel gives rise to an additional length scale, the deflection length lambda. We compare intermediate filament data with literature data for actin, another semiflexible polymer. Thereby we can vary both the channel width d and LP, which together with lambda constitute the scaling law lambda = a d2/3 LP1/3. Here, a is a constant which can be used to compare different experimental setups. Through this comparison we find the scaling law fully confirmed. Additionally, our dynamic measurements on vimentin filaments yield an improved value of two micrometers for LP. The worm like-chain model in general assumes that movements in two perpendicular planes decouple. Consequently the projection observed through the epi-fluorescence microscope is expected to be independent of channel height. Filaments confined in channels of the same width but different heights show identical behavior. We therefore conclude that the motions in perpendicular planes indeed decouple as predicted by the worm-like chain model.

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