Morphological parameters can capture emergent properties of dynamic disordered cytoskeletal networks

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Morphological parameters can capture emergent properties of dynamic disordered cytoskeletal networks

Authors

Ghosh, S.; Houston, L.; Vasquez, A.; Ghosh, K.; Prasad, A.

Abstract

The actin cytoskeleton is an inherently disordered active system. the actomyosin cortex and reconstituted actomyosin systems are globally disordered, yet undergo transitions between distinct disordered states as parameters like motor and crosslinker concentration and filament length and rigidity change. In cells these changes are related to genetic mutations or differences in cell state and dictate fundamental biological processes. However, we don't have well established methods to detect and classify differences in disordered polymer networks. Image-based morphology techniques provide a non-invasive, high-throughput method of extracting information about a system. In this work we simulate biopolymer networks under varying conditions and develop and use morphological descriptors to construct trajectories in morphospace. Using statistical analysis we find that morphological descriptors are able to distinguish between different trajectories of the system, including differences not apparent to the eye. However, no single descriptor alone is able to capture all the differences in the simulated trajectories. Nematic order parameters typically perform the worst for our simulations while curvature and texture descriptors can collectively distinguish between dynamic trajectories. This work helps develop quantification of cytoskeleton dynamics for classification and data-driven modeling.

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