Sakurako Tanida, Ken'ya Furuta, Kaori Nishikawa, Tetsuya Hiraiwa, Hiroaki Kojima, Kazuhiro Oiwa, Masaki Sano
2018年6月4日
Active matter consists of self-propelled elements exhibits fascinating
collective motions ranging from biological to artificial systems. Among wide
varieties of active matter systems, reconstituted bio-filaments moving on
molecular motor turf interacting purely by physical interactions provides the
fundamental test ground for understanding biological motility. However, until
now, multi-filament collisions,depletion agents or binding molecules has been
required for the emergence of ordered patterns in motility assay. Thus, whether
simple physical interactions during collisions such as steric effect without
depletion nor binding agents are sufficient or not for producing ordered
patterns in motility assays remains still elusive. In this article, we
constructed a motility assay purely consists of kinesin motor and microtubule
in which the frequency of binary collision can be controlled without using
depletion nor binding agents. By controlling strength of steric interaction and
density of microtubules, we found different states; disordered state,
long-range orientationally ordered state, liquid-gas-like phase separated
state, and transitions between them. We found that a balance between cross over
and aligning events in collisions controls transition from disorder to global
ordered state, while excessively strong steric effect leads to the phase
separated clusters. Furthermore, macroscopic chiral symmetry breaking observed
as a global rotation of nematic order observed in this experiment could be
attributed to the chirality at molecular level. Numerical simulations in which
we change strength of volume exclusion reproduce these experimental results.
Moreover, it reveals the transition from long-range alignment to nematic bands
then to aggregations. This study may provide new insights into dynamic ordering
by self-propelled elements through a purely physical interaction.