Gliding microtubules exhibit tunable collective rotation driven by chiral active forces
Madhuvanthi Guruprasad Athani, Nathan Prouse, Niranjan Sarpangala, Patrick Noerr, Guillaume Schiano-Lomoriello, Ankush Gargeshwari Kumar, Fereshteh L. Memarian, Jeremie Gaillard, Laurent Blanchoin, Linda S. Hirst, Kinjal Dasbiswas, Ajay Gopinathan, Ond\v{r}ej Ku\v{c}era

TL;DR
This study reveals how chiral active forces at the microscopic level drive tunable collective rotation in microtubule systems, advancing understanding of chirality propagation in active matter.
Contribution
It introduces a new mechanism where motor-induced chiral forces cause collective rotation, independent of filament shape chirality, and shows how filament stiffness modulates this behavior.
Findings
Chiral active forces induce collective rotation in microtubule assays.
Simulation predicts rotation speed and handedness can be tuned by filament stiffness.
Chirality propagates from molecular forces to large-scale collective motion.
Abstract
How chirality propagates across scales remains an open question in many biological and synthetic systems. An especially clear manifestation of this propagation is found in in vitro gliding assays of cytoskeletal filaments on surfaces, driven by molecular motors. These assays have become model systems of active matter dynamics, as they spontaneously organize into diverse dynamical states, including collective motions with chiral rotation. However, the microscopic mechanisms underlying these chiral collective dynamics have remained unclear. Here, we investigate rotating active nematic order in microtubule gliding assay experiments under two stabilization conditions, each on two types of substrates. We propose that chirality in active forces exerted by motors on microtubules represents a viable mechanism for this large-scale chirality. Using Brownian dynamics simulations of self-propelled,…
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