The complexity of microtubule-based motility

Invited

Abstract

The tug of war between multiple molecular motors driving the same cargo can take many forms and result in many observable motility phenotypes. I will discuss some of the relevant cases, from movement across microtubule intersections to a minimal tug of war system on a single microtubule. I will show that the overall range of behaviors is remarkable large and in particular that cargos can remain in a tug of war state for extremely long times and that this has significant implications for both cargo routing in cells and for our ability to tell tug of war processes from other pathways to immotility such as diffusion. Finally, I will discuss viable approaches for identifying tug of war in biological systems.

Presenters

  • Michael Vershinin

    University of Utah

Authors

  • Michael Vershinin

    University of Utah

  • jun allard

    UC Irvine

  • Steven gross

    UC Irvine

  • James Keener

    University of Utah

  • Jared Bergman

    University of Utah

  • Matthew Bovyn

    UC Irvine

  • Olaolu Osunbayo

    West Physics

  • chris miles

    New York University

  • Babu J.N. Reddy

    UC Irvine

  • Manasa Gudheti

    Bruker

  • Florence Doval

    University of Utah

  • Abhimanyu Sharma

    University of Utah