Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

The efficiency of intracellular cargo transport from specific sources to target locations is strongly dependent upon molecular motor-assisted motion along the cytoskeleton. Radial transport along microtubules and lateral transport along the filaments of the actin cortex underneath the cell membrane are characteristic for cells with a centrosome. The interplay between the specific cytoskeleton organization and the motor performance results in a spatially inhomogeneous intermittent search strategy. To analyze the efficiency of such intracellular search strategies, we formulate a random velocity model with intermittent arrest states. We evaluate efficiency in terms of mean first passage times for three different, frequently encountered intracellular transport tasks: 1) the narrow escape problem, which emerges during cargo transport to a synapse or other specific region of the cell membrane; 2) the reaction problem, which considers the binding time of two particles within the cell; and 3) the reaction-escape problem, which arises when cargo must be released at a synapse only after pairing with another particle. Our results indicate that cells are able to realize efficient search strategies for various intracellular transport tasks economically through a spatial cytoskeleton organization that involves only a narrow actin cortex rather than a cell body filled with randomly oriented actin filaments. Copyright © 2018 Biophysical Society. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Citation

Anne E Hafner, Heiko Rieger. Spatial Cytoskeleton Organization Supports Targeted Intracellular Transport. Biophysical journal. 2018 Mar 27;114(6):1420-1432

Expand section icon Mesh Tags


PMID: 29590599

View Full Text