Anomalous transport in the crowded world of biological cells
Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems · University of Stuttgart · +1 more institution
Abstract
A ubiquitous observation in cell biology is that the diffusive motion of macromolecules and organelles is anomalous, and a description simply based on the conventional diffusion equation with diffusion constants measured in dilute solution fails. This is commonly attributed to macromolecular crowding in the interior of cells and in cellular membranes, summarizing their densely packed and heterogeneous structures. The most familiar phenomenon is a sublinear, power-law increase of the mean-square displacement (MSD) as a function of the lag time, but there are other manifestations like strongly reduced and time-dependent diffusion coefficients, persistent correlations in time, non-Gaussian distributions of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 38.73
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 313
Authors
2- FHFelix HöflingCorresponding
Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems, University of Stuttgart
- TFThomas Franosch
Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg
Topics & keywords
- Anomalous diffusion
- Macromolecular crowding
- Diffusion
- Random walk
- Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy
- Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching
- Brownian motion
- Mean squared displacement