Steric effects induce geometric remodeling of actin bundles in filopodia
Ulrich Dobramysl, Garegin A. Papoian, Radek Erban

TL;DR
This study uses stochastic simulations to show that steric hindrance in actin filament bundles causes structural collapse and hollowing, influencing the geometry and dynamics of filopodia.
Contribution
It reveals how steric effects induce geometric remodeling of actin bundles, leading to hollow and conical structures, a novel insight into filopodial architecture.
Findings
Excluded volume interactions cause central filament collapse.
Hollowed structures resemble electron microscopy observations.
Steric effects lead to complex, history-dependent dynamics.
Abstract
Filopodia are ubiquitous fingerlike protrusions, spawned by many eukaryotic cells, to probe and interact with their environments. Polymerization dynamics of actin filaments, comprising the structural core of filopodia, largely determine their instantaneous lengths and overall lifetimes. The polymerization reactions at the filopodial tip require transport of G-actin, which enter the filopodial tube from the filopodial base and diffuse toward the filament barbed ends near the tip. Actin filaments are mechanically coupled into a tight bundle by cross-linker proteins. Interestingly, many of these proteins are relatively short, restricting the free diffusion of cytosolic G-actin throughout the bundle and, in particular, its penetration into the bundle core. To investigate the effect of steric restrictions on G-actin diffusion by the porous structure of filopodial actin filament bundle, we…
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