Theoretical Perspectives on Biological Machines
Mauro L. Mugnai, Changbong Hyeon, Michael Hinczewski, D. Thirumalai

TL;DR
This paper reviews theoretical frameworks for understanding biological machines, emphasizing the importance of coarse-grained models, experimental validation, and the need to incorporate molecular details for in vivo insights.
Contribution
It provides an overview of current theoretical methods for biological machines and discusses their limitations and the necessity of integrating molecular details for deeper understanding.
Findings
Theories explain in vitro experiments on molecular machines.
Trade-offs between precision, energy, and performance are analyzed.
Complexities like mutations significantly impact machine functions.
Abstract
Many biological functions are executed by molecular machines, which consume energy and convert it into mechanical work. Biological machines have evolved to transport cargo, facilitate folding of proteins and RNA, remodel chromatin and replicate DNA. A common aspect of these machines is that their functions are driven out of equilibrium. It is a challenge to provide a general framework for understanding the functions of biological machines, such as molecular motors, molecular chaperones, and helicases. Using these machines as prototypical examples, we describe a few general theoretical methods providing insights into their functions. Although the theories rely on coarse-graining of these complex systems they have proven useful in not only accounting for many in vitro experiments but also addressing questions such as how the trade-off between precision, energetic costs and optimal…
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