Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast;...

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Lecture 11 • Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns • Regional stiffness & motion – AFM : Yeast; Myocytes • Mechano-electrical coupling – Electro-mechanical coupling Homework

Transcript of Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast;...

Page 1: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

Lecture 11• Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns

• Regional stiffness & motion– AFM : Yeast; Myocytes• Mechano-electrical coupling– Electro-mechanical coupling

Homework

Page 2: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

Free energy landscapes

• Large activation barrier is reduced by the interaction ( with a small cost of deforming E). The barrier is reduced.

Page 3: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

Mechanical model of enzyme

• E has a binding site with a shape, charge distribution, hydrophobicity, and H-binding sites, ~matching those on the substrate. To match perfectly, S (and possibly E) must deform. One bond (spring) may stretch close to breaking point. Bond can be broken by thermal energy, stabilizing the P, that no longer fits in the enzyme.

Page 4: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

Getting rate eqns from rxn scheme:

• 1. Each node leads to a diffEq for #molecules in the corresponding state

• 2. Find all arrows impinging on a node. The time derivative of the # in this state is positive for each arrow pointing toward the node, and negative for each pointing away

Page 5: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

][

][

:..@

......)1(

......

)()1]([

121

1

211

][ 211

Skkk

SkP

ssquasi

occupiedtimeoffractionPP

unoccupiedtimeoffractionP

PkkPSkdt

dP

PESSE

ES

EES

E

ESESE

kkkS

Page 6: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

)][

1(11

][

][

][

)(

:

2max

1

21

S

K

vv

sK

Sv

Ekv

k

kkK

Define

M

m

M

M

1/v

1/[S]

Page 7: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

• Promoters have different abilities to uncoil

• Twisting DNA torsional buckling instability

• Unwinding and causes local denaturation

• Many motors are needed: RNA plymerase, DNA polymerase: 100 nucleotides/sec.

• Forces (pN) can stop transcription

Page 8: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

Koster, DA et al. Nature : , 2004

Page 9: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

TOP1B removing supercoils

Page 10: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

Model of TOP1B

Page 11: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

Elasticity of cellsNano versus macro elasticityBehaviour relative to kT: Stretch a rubber band and a

string of paper clips. Significant for The nanometer-scale monomers of a

macromolecule, but not for a string of paper clips. The retracting force exerted by a stretched rubber band is entropic. It increases disorder.

Do most polymers have persistence lengths longer than their total (contour) length?

Page 12: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

Regional Elasticity

2

2

1

EE

x

Tkk

surface

Bsp

• Motion of beads inside cells measured by mean squared displacement.

• Material stiffness, E, and Poisson’s ratio determines overall stiffness of object, the surface stiffness. From Hertzian model of continuum mechanics.

Page 13: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

nanoscale mapping of cells• Regional (topographic) distribution of stiffness.

• AFM Cantilever must be more (or at least as) compliant than the cell, I.e. impedance matching . klever < kcell

• If klever > kcell then no motion fidelity because cell needs to overcome cantilever stiffness before it moves.

• If klever < kcell then OK

Page 14: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

Measuring spring constant with AFM

Page 15: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

• Deflection image of trapped yeast

• Bud scar shown

Page 16: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

• Height map• Deflection Map• Force map

Page 17: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

• Mica is infinitely stiff re:cantilever, so slope is 1.

• F= klever d

• To account for drift,

• F*= klever (d-d0)

• Neglect tip surface adhesion. Sample Height

Def

lect

ion

Page 18: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

• Cantilever k = 0.05 +- 0.01 nN/m• Yeast C.B. k = 0.06 nN/m• Mammalian C.B. k = 0.002 nN/m• Yeast have thick cell wall, chitin • Cantilever & C.W. are 2 springs in series• Noise (rms) of combination is 0.06 nm• Resonance of free cantilever is 3.7 KHz• Resonance of PZ tube scanner is 4.5 KHz

Page 19: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

Do cells emit sound?

• Myocytes beat in culture

• Insect muscles

• eg., in vivo muscle, hair cells, flagella all oscillate, @ f’s 1 to 300 Hz; Ca waves.

• Single myofibrils

• Coupled molecular motors theoretically up to 10 KHz.

Page 20: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

yeast deflection mode images: Pelling, AE, et al. Science, 305:1147, 2004

Dried cells Live cells trapped in filter

Color represents deflection

Page 21: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.
Page 22: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

Resonance of AFM

Lngmuir 19:4539, 2003

Page 23: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

Source of sound

n ~ Y (Resonance)

• Arrhenius plot

• Similar to activation energies for molecular motors, dynein, myosin, kinesin.

• Yeast has these

molekjenergyactivationE

e

a

RTEa

/15.58..

/0

Page 24: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

What is the origin of the sound?

• Motion :– Active metabolic process : Azide stops ATP

production by mitochondria. Does not Y, nor morphology.

– Mechanical resonance/ Brownian

Page 25: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

Speeds

• Speed: 3 nm X 1 kHz = 3 m/sec

• myosin 0.2 to 8 m/sec

• MT proteins : 0.02 to 7 m/sec

• Other cell activities have 10X these speeds

Page 26: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

and forces

• Force 3 nm X 0.06 N/m = 0.2 nN

• When AFM force , no in amplitude until F > 10 nN :

• 10 nN too big for a single protein

• Must be many proteins coordinated

Page 27: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

Origin of Sonocytology

• Cooperativity is common, eg., muscle, hair cells, flagella all oscillate, but @ lower f’s 1 to 300 Hz; Ca waves.

• Coupled molecular motors theoretically up to 10 KHz.

• Non-invasive w/o dyes or quantum dots• Communication; pumping?• For softer cells, need refined cantilever. • Cancer cell sound differential?

Page 28: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.
Page 29: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.
Page 30: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.
Page 31: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.
Page 32: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

How does muscle fatigue?

• Test of a ‘skinned’ muscle fiber from EDL of rat.

• Can activate by direct stimulation of any step in the cascade.

Pederson, TH: Science 305: 1144, 2004

AP in T system

VS activation

SR Ca++ release

Force

Page 33: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.
Page 34: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

Mechano - regulation

• Growth, proliferation, protein synthesis, gene expression, homeostasis.

• Transduction process- how?• Single cells do not provide enough material. • MTC can perturb ~ 30,000 cells and is

limited.• MTS is more versatile- more cells, longer

periods, varied waveforms..

Page 35: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

• Tactile sensation in us: Pacinian corpuscles

• Gating by mechanical energy

• What governs the transient behaviour?

Page 36: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

C. Elegans mechanotransduction:Goodman, MB, Science 306, 427, 2004

• Cellular anatomy is entirely described• First animal to be genetically coded• 12 proteins mediate the response and are coded

by mec genes• Knocking out MEC 2,4 & 6 abolishes the current• Allele of MEC 10 reduces it ( substitutes a

glutamate for a glycine). • Insert into Xenopus oocytes

Page 37: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

EC mechanoregulation

Page 38: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.
Page 39: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.
Page 40: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.
Page 41: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

Skeletal Muscle Organization TheMuscle Fiber

Page 42: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

• Hundreds of molecular motors

• Homologous proteins

• Gene Knockouts have shown many other functions for motor proteins

Page 43: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

Homework

• What is the average

Page 44: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.
Page 45: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.
Page 46: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.
Page 47: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.
Page 48: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.
Page 49: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

Comparative motors

Page 52: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

F1 ATPase: A rotary motor

• Can either make or break ATP, hence is reversible

• Torque of 40 pN-nM; work in 1/3 rev. is 80 pn-nM (40 * 2/3) equivalent to free energy from ATP hydrolysis

• Can see rotation by attaching an actin filament

Page 53: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

For rotary motion:

I2t

d

d

2 M M

w L2

4

I1

3m L2

Page 54: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology 2; 669-677 (2001)ATP SYNTHASE — A MARVELLOUS ROTARY ENGINE OF THE CELL

< previous  next >

Page 55: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

Rotary Cellular Motors• The rotary mechanism of ATP synthase , Stock D, Gibbons C, Arechaga I,

Leslie AGW, Walker JECURRENT OPINION IN STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY ,10 (6): 672-679 DEC 2000

•  • 2. ATP synthase - A marvellous rotary engine of the cell, Yoshida M,

Muneyuki E, Hisabori TNATURE REVIEWS MOLECULAR CELL BIOLOGY 2 (9): 669-677 SEP 2001

•  • 3. The gamma subunit in chloroplast F-1-ATPase can rotate in a

unidirectional and counter-clockwise manner Hisabori T, Kondoh A, Yoshida M FEBS LETTERS 463 (1-2): 35-38 DEC 10 1999

•  • 4. Constructing nanomechanical devices powered by biomolecular motors.C.

Montemagno, G Bachand, Nanotechnology 10: 225-2312, 1999.

Page 56: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

Current is coulombs per second. How many charges in a coulomb?For this you need Faraday's constant 96,500 Coulombs per mole ofcharged molecules, in this case potassium ions.

Q K Kflux0.24

96 50010 12 2.5 10 18 moles

sec

Page 57: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

If work, W, is done on the particle during diffusion, then the time is increased as:

So say W = 10 KT, then tw = 20 ms t w t d e

W

kT

So how fast can the motor go? Assuming a back-and-forth motionit would take at least 40 ms, so the max frequency = 250 Hz or10 nM X 250 per second = 2.5 microns per second. (linear motion).

Page 58: Lecture 11 Energetics & Kinetics of cellular rxns Regional stiffness & motion –AFM : Yeast; Myocytes Mechano-electrical coupling –Electro-mechanical coupling.

• When L>> the chain has many bends and is always crumpled in solution – the FJC model applies, with each link approximated as 2 and perfectly flexible joints.

• To count all possible curved states in a smooth-bending rod in solution- it’s a WLC- supercoiling is possible.