English

Type-IV Pilus Deformation Can Explain Retraction Behavior

Biological Physics 2015-06-22 v1 Soft Condensed Matter Subcellular Processes

Abstract

Polymeric filament like type IV Pilus (TFP) can transfer forces in excess of 100pN during their retraction before stalling, powering surface translocation(twitching). Single TFP level experiments have shown remarkable nonlinearity in the retraction behavior influenced by the external load as well as levels of PilT molecular motor protein. This includes reversal of motion near stall forces when the concentration of the PilT protein is lowered significantly. In order to explain this behavior, we analyze the coupling of TFP elasticity and interfacial behavior with PilT kinetics. We model retraction as reaction controlled and elongation as transport controlled process. The reaction rates vary with TFP deformation which is modeled as a compound elastic body consisting of multiple helical strands under axial load. Elongation is controlled by monomer transport which suffer entrapment due to excess PilT in the cell periplasm. Our analysis shows excellent agreement with a host of experimental observations and we present a possible biophysical relevance of model parameters through a mechano-chemical stall force map

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1409.5472,
  title  = {Type-IV Pilus Deformation Can Explain Retraction Behavior},
  author = {Ranajay Ghosh and Aloke Kumar and Ashkan Vaziri},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1409.5472},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

6 pages, 4 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-22T06:00:17.106Z