articlePhysical Review LettersMar 10, 2006Closed access

Physical Nature of Bacterial Cytoplasm

Princeton University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

We track the motion of individual fluorescently labeled mRNA molecules inside live E. coli cells. We find that the motion is subdiffusive, with an exponent that is robust to physiological changes, including the disruption of cytoskeletal elements. By modifying the parameters of the RNA molecule and the bacterial cell, we are able to examine the possible mechanisms that can lead to this unique type of motion, especially the effect of macromolecular crowding. We also examine the implications of anomalous diffusion on the kinetics of bacterial gene regulation, in particular, how transcription factors find their DNA targets.

Citation impact

919
total citations
FWCI
17.15
Percentile
100%
References
26
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Macromolecular crowding
  • Cytoplasm
  • Cytoskeleton
  • Cell biology
  • Biophysics
  • RNA
  • DNA
  • Transcription (linguistics)
No related works found for this paper.