Intracellular transport driven by cytoskeletal motors: General mechanisms and defects
Cecile Appert-Rolland, Maximilian Ebbinghaus, Ludger Santen

TL;DR
This paper reviews the mechanisms of intracellular transport driven by cytoskeletal motors, focusing on microtubule-based transport, modeling approaches, cooperative effects, and implications for neuronal diseases like Alzheimer's.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive survey of experimental findings, modeling methods, and open questions related to motor-driven intracellular transport, especially in neuronal axons.
Findings
Microtubule transport involves complex motor interactions.
Modeling with cellular automata helps understand transport dynamics.
Transport efficiency depends on motor cooperation and microtubule dynamics.
Abstract
Cells are strongly out-of-equilibrium systems driven by continuous energy supply. They carry out many vital functions requiring active transport of various ingredients and organelles, some being small, others being large. The cytoskeleton, composed of three types of filaments, determines the shape of the cell and plays a role in cell motion. It also serves as a road network for the so-called cytoskeletal motors. These molecules can attach to a cytoskeletal filament, perform directed motion, possibly carrying along some cargo, and then detach. It is a central issue to understand how intracellular transport driven by molecular motors is regulated, in particular because its breakdown is one of the signatures of some neuronal diseases like the Alzheimer. We give a survey of the current knowledge on microtubule based intracellular transport. We first review some biological facts obtained…
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