Title: Tuesday, March 01, 2005
1Tuesday, March 01, 2005
- Geometric and Mechanical Properties
- Mechanical Statics
- Review-
2Thick walled sphere
- Equilibrium
- Pressure inside
- Average stress in wall
- Pressure from outside
- Pressurized both sides
3Charged polymers Electromechanical Chemistry
I.e. Alanine charge
Aqueous charge
4Shape Oblate sphere
Meridions
Curvature
Latitudes
Losing volume, not gaining area
5Slow cell squishing
6Curvature
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8Membrane Tension
9Tension on membrane patch
Fappl
Ri
f
T
f
Rc
Tension force pulling down
FT 2 p Ri T sin(f)
Force Balance
Fappl FT Pp Ri 2
10Tangent-Curvature
t1
t2
R(s) position
11Forces on Rods
- Does compressive force play a role?
- Failure mode is buckling-To analyze must consider
geometry when it buckles- - (1) get m.o.I
- (2) general formula for moment in the rod. (3)
moment as a fxn of applied F. - (4) relation between R of curvature and x, (5)
simplify eqn.
12Step (1) Moment of Inertia of c.s.
For hollow cylinder, subtract the hollow portion.
13Step (2) Bending a rod
sDs
s
dA
y
R (at neutral surface) is assumed constant
on the small segment.
14Step (2) reiteration(Landau Lifschitz, 1986 ,
Theory of Elasticity)
15Step (2) continued Integrate
16Step (3) Moment due to appl F
P
P
h(x)
x
P P
17Step (4)
Minus sign because Curvature is negative. From
before
Note similarity to harmonic Motion
(5)
Hmax occurs at Lc/2 and h(0) h(Lc) 0.
18Step (5) Differentiate h twice
19- Use spring equation. Hmax occurs at Lc/2. h(0)
h(Lc) 0. We can relate F to Lc by double
differentiating h, and then comparing it to the
previous formula for the moment. - Buckle force is independent of hmax . Rod will
buckle when Pgt Pbuckle - Can a microtubule withstand typical forces in a
cell?
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21Buckling of Rods with Different Fixations
22Buckling of cell without reinforcement
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24- Living cells are both affected by and dependent
upon mechanical forces in their environment.
Cells are specialized for life in their own
particular environments, whose physical stress
patterns become necessary for normal functioning
of the cells. If the forces go outside the normal
range, then the cells are likely to malfunction,
possibly manifesting as a disease or disability.
25Material efficiencyStrength/weight
Square Bar
Rod
26Fiber orientation for strength
A Actin fibers in two C2C12 cells. B,C C2C12
cell with a schematic representation of the
actin cytoskeleton, which is predominantly
orientated along the first principal axis of the
cell. As a result of the actin fibers,
deformation of the cell and its nucleus is
restricted in this direction.
27Cell Walls for strength
How thick does wall need to be to withstand
normal pressures inside a bacterium, I.e. 30-60
atm. ? Lets say lysis occurs _at_ 50 strain. We can
approximate KA By KVd, and for isotropic wall
material, Kv E, so, tfailure 0.5 KA RP 0.5 E
d. So to not fail, dgt 2RP/E . So for R 0.5 mM,
P 1 atm,
28Homogeneous rigid sheet Biomembrane
Stretching membrane thins it exposing hydrophobic
core to Water. Rupture at 2-10 area Expansion,
so say lysis tension 0.2 J/M2. For a 5 mm cell
, P 8000 J/M3 0.08 atm. at rupture.
Bilayer compression resistance, KA 4 g g 0.04
J/M2
29Comparative Forces
- To pull a 5 mm cell at a speed of 1 m/sec
- F 6phRv 0.1 pN
- Compare this with force to bend or buckle hair,
10 cm length, R 0.05 mm - 5 x 10 4 pN
- or to move it 1 cm
- F 3 kf z/L3 1.5 x 10 6 pN
F
30Comparative Forces
- Adhesion force between proteins on cell and on
matrix tens of pN. - Spectrin spring constant 1-2 x 10 5 J/m2 so to
stretch by 0.1 um takes 1 pN.
31Properties of the CSK
- A dynamic structure that changes both its
properties and composition in response to
mechanical perturbations.
32Pulling on CSK
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36Uni- and Bi-axial Stress and Strain Take the
case of unconstrained isotropic object compressed
in the y direction
Before strain
After strain
x
37- Note that for an elastic material the strain
occurs almost instantaneously upon application of
the stress. Also note that to maintain constant
stress, sy , the applied force must be reduced
if the face area increases, but this would be a
negligible change for all practical situations. - The strain in the y direction is
-
38- Because the transverse direction is
unconstrained -
- and,
-
39Now, Consider the case where the x direction is
constrained from movement. I.e. transverse
movement is resisted, making
Thus the new stress in the y direction is the
original unconstrained stress plus the stress
caused by transverse constraint
40Solving for ey we have the biaxial strain
equation
413-Dimensional stresses (stress tensor)
42 Stress components _at_ Equilibrium
43Blood Forces
Y.C. Fung
44Analyze a Small element of upper EC membrane
(Also a mult-part solution)
45Analysis of EC upper membrane
Symmetrical
(Fluid Mosaic)
46On surface facing blood
On surface facing cytosol
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48On surface facing blood
Define
We need membrane tension as f(t)
49(if Tx 0 _at_ x0)
50Stress on cell from flow
_at_ x -L
For t 1 N/m2 , L 10 mm, h 10 nm
51Shear stress from flow in a pipe
P1 P2
52Fluid Pressure is omnidirectional
Hence P1P2P3P4P5 P
53Two State Transitions
54Entropic springs
4-segment chain configurations
RNA
24
22 nM
Sudden extensions of 22 nM (unfolding) when
forces above 14 pN are applied
tension
Small ree Many Config- urations
Large ree Few Configurations
Applying a tension to the zero ree state reduces
possible configurations to 10. S drops from
ln(16) to ln (10). Hence tension translates to
loss of entropy.
55Rate Constants
Kopen 0.9 sec-1 Kfold 8.5 sec-1
Kopen 7 sec-1 Kfold 1.5 sec-1
56RNA unfolding
57Coding of Probability
Integral pulse frequency modulation
Probability Pulse frequency and width
Modulation
58Pulse Width Modulator
Inputs
Leaky integrator
Thresholder
Pulses out
Reset
59Mechanical Models
60Voigt solution
61Classwork
- Make a simulink model of the RNA unfolding
kinetics. Your model should be well documented,
according to the following guidelines - All parameter boxes should be labeled
- Document boxes should be included to describe
operations - Internal parameters, such as initial conditions,
should be specified - Sub-systems should be used so that the entire
model can be fit onto 1 page and each sub-system
can be printed separately, with documentation. - A separate description of the system and all
formulae should be made. - Outputs should be the predicted, as well as
measured probabilities - A reasonable noise level should be placed in the
model
62Control System, I.e. climate control
63Temperature Control
64G(s)
Y(s)
U(s)
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66- Patterns on silicon with fibronectin.
- Cells grown on small pattern Apoptosis
- On a line they differentiate
- On a large surface, they grow.
67Mechanical Terms Review
- Statics and dynamics
- Kinematics and kinetics
- Vector and scalars
- Forces, resultants
- Deformation
68Homework
- Using the data shown in Figure previous, and the
ground free energy, Fo 79 kT, graph the
unfolding and folding probabilities, using Excel
or other program. Put actual data points for the
selected forces on your theoretical curve.
69Tensiometry
Plates coated with poly-HEMA Compression of
cells reduces the load measured by the balance by
an equivalent amount
70Liquid behaviour Surface tensions of embryonic
tissue
Liquid Properties
NR L H Ep M