大象传媒

THIS IS THE MOVEMENT OF THOUSANDS OF NANOMOTORS, EACH MOVING INDEPENDENTLY, ON A CONFINED TRACK. THE NANOMOTORS START AT THE CENTRE, AND RANDOMLY CHOOSES A DIRECTION. THE TWO MODES MOVING LEFT AND RIGHT ILLUSTRATE HOW THE NANOMOTORS BEGIN BY RANDOMLY CHOOSING A DIRECTION AND CONTINUE MOVING IN THAT DIRECTION. THE COLOUR OF EACH DOT REPRESENTS THE NUMBER OF EACH MOTOR AT THAT POSITION IN TIME. 

BUILDING MOLECULAR MOTORS – ONE STEP AT A TIME

September 26, 2018
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Reddit
SMS
Email
Copy

Inside every human are trillions of cells, each containing hundreds of thousands of protein nanomotors.

These tiny protein nanomotors are ten thousand times smaller than the width of the rings in a fingerprint. Described as the 鈥榳orkhorses鈥 of the cell, they push and pull cargo throughout our cells.

Chapin Korosec, who is completing a PhD in physics, explains that 鈥淣anomotors cannot simply move around randomly if they are required to perform a task 鈥 they must move in the general direction towards their intended cellular target.鈥

Past studies have detailed how some nanomotors move and operate, but no scientist has ever been able to create a synthetic protein-based nanomotor.

Why is this so important?

Korosec says, 鈥淭hese are beautifully complicated machines and engineering artificial systems will help us understand their biological counterparts." He adds, 鈥淥nly then can we start thinking about how we can copy nature to create new bio-technologies.鈥

The field of synthetic nanoscale machinery is still in its infancy, but Korosec has made headway in understanding the physics of one of these machines.

He and his team study a class of nanomotors that are critical for plasmid separation in bacteria and collagen processing in humans. These nanomotors operate by destroying track binding sites as they move forward, thereby preventing backwards motion.

 鈥淲e developed simulations that explored a simple 鈥榮tripped down鈥 model system to investigate how its physical parameters impact its performance鈥 says Korosec. 鈥淚magine moving through a mosh pit, with hundreds of people jostling you about鈥 he says.  鈥淭he nanomotor we studied navigate through similarly harsh cellular environments 鈥 by moving forward they are preventing steps in reverse.鈥

The team found that nanomotors that move by destroying their track sites can maintain the most directional trajectories if they have many options to bind onto their track. For example,  each nanomotor has a varying number of legs that assist in locomotion.  Korosec found that increasing the number of legs, while keeping their length short, produced the most directional trajectory.

Korosec hopes that a better understanding of nanomotors may help guide treatment for diseases like osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, and osteoporosis.

 鈥淭hese diseases involve the destruction of cartilage or bone due to the misregulation of proteins called MMPs.鈥 He adds, 鈥淭hese delinquent MMPs destroy tissue faster than they can be repaired. If we knew what the physical mechanisms were behind proteins like MMPs, then we鈥檇 be one step closer towards understanding these diseases.鈥

Co-author Nancy Forde, professor of physics at 大象传媒 says, 鈥淚t is important that we test our understanding of the operational principles of protein motors.  By challenging ourselves to explain and predict their behaviour, using model systems such as this one, we can determine whether we truly understand the basis of their function.鈥

Click  to read the study in Physical Review E.