Motor proteins traffic regulation by supply-demand balance of resources
Luca Ciandrini, I. Neri, Jean-Charles Walter, O. Dauloudet, A., Parmeggiani

TL;DR
This paper develops a theoretical framework to understand how the competition for limited motor proteins influences their density and crowding on cytoskeletal filaments, with implications for cellular transport regulation.
Contribution
It introduces two models of motor protein dynamics with finite resources, providing analytical and numerical insights into crowding and phase transitions on filaments.
Findings
Motor density profiles depend on supply-demand balance.
Reservoir depletion affects motor binding and crowding.
Phase diagrams predict motor jams based on experimental parameters.
Abstract
In cells and in vitro assays the number of motor proteins involved in biological transport processes is far from being unlimited. The cytoskeletal binding sites are in contact with the same finite reservoir of motors (either the cytosol or the flow chamber) and hence compete for recruiting the available motors, potentially depleting the reservoir and affecting cytoskeletal transport. In this work we provide a theoretical framework to study, analytically and numerically, how motor density profiles and crowding along cytoskeletal filaments depend on the competition of motors for their binding sites. We propose two models in which finite processive motor proteins actively advance along cytoskeletal filaments and are continuously exchanged with the motor pool. We first look at homogeneous reservoirs and then examine the effects of free motor diffusion in the surrounding medium. We consider…
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