Enhanced diffusion and chemotaxis at the nanoscale
Jaime Agudo-Canalejo, Tunrayo Adeleke-Larodo, Pierre Illien, Ramin, Golestanian

TL;DR
This paper reviews experimental evidence and theoretical models explaining enhanced enzyme diffusion and chemotaxis at the nanoscale, emphasizing equilibrium mechanisms and their implications for biology and nanotechnology.
Contribution
It introduces a new equilibrium model explaining enzyme diffusion enhancement via substrate binding and discusses its relevance to chemotaxis phenomena.
Findings
Enhanced diffusion observed in enzymes with substrate presence
Equilibrium binding models can explain diffusion enhancement
Enzyme chemotaxis towards substrate gradients
Abstract
Enzymes have been recently proposed to have mechanical activity associated with their chemical activity. In a number of recent studies, it has been reported that enzymes undergo enhanced diffusion in the presence of their corresponding substrate, when this substrate is uniformly distributed in solution. Moreover, if the concentration of the substrate is non-uniform, enzymes and other small molecules have been reported to show chemotaxis -- biased stochastic movement in the direction of the substrate gradient -- typically towards higher concentrations of this substrate, with a few exceptions. The underlying physical mechanisms responsible for enhanced diffusion and chemotaxis at the nanoscale, however, are still not well understood. Understanding these processes is important both for fundamental biological research, e.g. in the context of spatial organization of enzymes in metabolic…
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