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Elastic Response, Buckling, and Instability of Microtubules under Radial Indentation
by
de Pablo, Pedro J.
, Schmidt, Christoph F.
, Carrasco, Carolina
, Schaap, Iwan A.T.
, MacKintosh, Frederick C.
in
Biopolymers
/ Cells
/ Computer Simulation
/ Elasticity
/ Hardness
/ Hardness Tests
/ Mechanical properties
/ Micromanipulation
/ Microscopy, Atomic Force
/ Microtubules - chemistry
/ Microtubules - ultrastructure
/ Models, Chemical
/ Models, Molecular
/ Protein Conformation
/ Protein Denaturation
/ Proteins
/ Stress, Mechanical
/ Supramolecular Assemblies
2006
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Elastic Response, Buckling, and Instability of Microtubules under Radial Indentation
by
de Pablo, Pedro J.
, Schmidt, Christoph F.
, Carrasco, Carolina
, Schaap, Iwan A.T.
, MacKintosh, Frederick C.
in
Biopolymers
/ Cells
/ Computer Simulation
/ Elasticity
/ Hardness
/ Hardness Tests
/ Mechanical properties
/ Micromanipulation
/ Microscopy, Atomic Force
/ Microtubules - chemistry
/ Microtubules - ultrastructure
/ Models, Chemical
/ Models, Molecular
/ Protein Conformation
/ Protein Denaturation
/ Proteins
/ Stress, Mechanical
/ Supramolecular Assemblies
2006
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Elastic Response, Buckling, and Instability of Microtubules under Radial Indentation
by
de Pablo, Pedro J.
, Schmidt, Christoph F.
, Carrasco, Carolina
, Schaap, Iwan A.T.
, MacKintosh, Frederick C.
in
Biopolymers
/ Cells
/ Computer Simulation
/ Elasticity
/ Hardness
/ Hardness Tests
/ Mechanical properties
/ Micromanipulation
/ Microscopy, Atomic Force
/ Microtubules - chemistry
/ Microtubules - ultrastructure
/ Models, Chemical
/ Models, Molecular
/ Protein Conformation
/ Protein Denaturation
/ Proteins
/ Stress, Mechanical
/ Supramolecular Assemblies
2006
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Elastic Response, Buckling, and Instability of Microtubules under Radial Indentation
Journal Article
Elastic Response, Buckling, and Instability of Microtubules under Radial Indentation
2006
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Overview
We tested the mechanical properties of single microtubules by lateral indentation with the tip of an atomic force microscope. Indentations up to ∼3.6
nm, i.e., 15% of the microtubule diameter, resulted in an approximately linear elastic response, and indentations were reversible without hysteresis. At an indentation force of around 0.3
nN we observed an instability corresponding to an ∼1-nm indentation step in the taxol-stabilized microtubules, which could be due to partial or complete rupture of a relatively small number of lateral or axial tubulin-tubulin bonds. These indentations were reversible with hysteresis when the tip was retracted and no trace of damage was observed in subsequent high-resolution images. Higher forces caused substantial damage to the microtubules, which either led to depolymerization or, occasionally, to slowly reannealing holes in the microtubule wall. We modeled the experimental results using finite-element methods and find that the simple assumption of a homogeneous isotropic material, albeit structured with the characteristic protofilament corrugations, is sufficient to explain the linear elastic response of microtubules.
Publisher
Elsevier Inc,Biophysical Society
Subject
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