Issue 11, 2011

Maximum directionality and systematic classification of molecular motors

Abstract

Track-walking molecular motors are widely used in living cells for transport purposes, and artificial mimics are being vigorously pursued in engineered molecular systems. The defining character for a motor is its intrinsic capability to utilize energy input to rectify a sustained directional motion out of stochastic thermal motion. The energy injection can be coupled to a motor's mechanical steps in different ways, leading to different motor mechanisms. We derive here a formulation for maximum motor performance in terms of a new quantity called directionality based on a general representation of the track-walking motors. Compared to performance measures like velocity and processivity, directionality is a cleaner and more robust indicator of the rectification mechanism that amounts to a motor's inner design/working principles. Meaningful and distinctly different upper limits of directionality were found to exist for a wide variety of experimentally demonstrated and theoretically proposed motors and their biological counterparts. The maximum directionality provides a conceptual framework by which all of these different motors were quantitatively compared and systematically classified according to their mechanistic advancement. The results yield a series of guidelines for artificial motor development, and expose important evolutionary traits of biomotors.

Graphical abstract: Maximum directionality and systematic classification of molecular motors

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
13 Nov 2010
Accepted
05 Jan 2011
First published
07 Feb 2011

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2011,13, 5159-5170

Maximum directionality and systematic classification of molecular motors

A. Efremov and Z. Wang, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2011, 13, 5159 DOI: 10.1039/C0CP02519D

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