Abstract
The formation of bundles composed of actin filaments and cross-linking proteins is an essential process in the maintenance of the cells’ cytoskeleton. It has also been recreated by in-vitro experiments, where actin networks are routinely produced to mimic and study the cellular structures. It has been observed that these bundles seem to have a well-defined width distribution, which has not been adequately described theoretically. We propose here that packing defects of the filaments, quenched and random, contribute an effective repulsion that counters the cross-linking adhesion energy and leads to a well-defined bundle width. This is a two-dimensional strain-field version of the classic Rayleigh instability of charged droplets.
- Received 30 August 2007
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevE.78.011916
©2008 American Physical Society