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Article Dans Une Revue ChemPhysChem Année : 2012

Long-range transport of giant vesicles along microtubule networks

Résumé

We report on a minimal system to mimic intracellular transport of membrane-bounded, vesicular cargo. In a cell-free assay, purified kinesin-1 motor proteins were directly anchored to the membrane of giant unilamellar vesicles, and their movement studied along two-dimensional microtubule networks. Motion-tracking of vesicles with diameters of 1-3 μm revealed traveling distances up to the millimeter range. The transport velocities were identical to velocities of cargo-free motors. Using total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy, we were able to estimate the number of GFP-labeled motors involved in the transport of a single vesicle. We found that the vesicles were transported by the cooperative activity of typically 5-10 motor molecules. The presented assay is expected to open up further applications in the field of synthetic biology, aiming at the in vitro reconstitution of sub-cellular multi-motor transport systems. It may also find applications in bionanotechnology, where the controlled long-range transport of artificial cargo is a promising means to advance current lab-on-a-chip systems.

Dates et versions

hal-00759899 , version 1 (03-12-2012)

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Christophe Herold, Cecile Leduc, Stock Robert, Stefan Diez, Petra Schwille. Long-range transport of giant vesicles along microtubule networks. ChemPhysChem, 2012, 13 (4), pp.1001. ⟨10.1002/cphc.201100669⟩. ⟨hal-00759899⟩
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