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Mechanics plays a central role in determining form and function in
biology. This holds at the cellular, molecular and tissue scales.
At the cellular scale, mechanics in?uences cell adhesion,
cytoskeletal dynamics and the traction that the cell can generate
on a given substrate. All of these in turn - fect the cellular
functions of migration, mitosis, phagocytosis, endocytosis and stem
cell differentiation among others. Indeed, if cells do not develop
the appropriate stresses, they are unviable and die. These aspects
of cell mechanics are frequently used by mainstream biologists, as
traditional mechanicians may be surprised to learn. There is a
growing view that many functions of the cell are mechanical in
nature even though chemical signals play crucial roles in the
processes. Free energy barriers control transitions between
different conformations of vir- ally every macromolecule including
DNA, RNA, the adhesion protein integrin, the motor protein myosin,
and the proteins vinculin and talin that link the cytoskeleton to
focal adhesions. The strain energy can be a signi?cant component of
the total free energy barrier. For binding to take place, the
macromolecules need to be in conf- mational states that expose
chemical groups without steric hinderance. The kinetics of chemical
reactions are therefore strongly in?uenced by the conformational
strain energy.
Mechanics plays a central role in determining form and function in
biology. This holds at the cellular, molecular and tissue scales.
At the cellular scale, mechanics in?uences cell adhesion,
cytoskeletal dynamics and the traction that the cell can generate
on a given substrate. All of these in turn - fect the cellular
functions of migration, mitosis, phagocytosis, endocytosis and stem
cell differentiation among others. Indeed, if cells do not develop
the appropriate stresses, they are unviable and die. These aspects
of cell mechanics are frequently used by mainstream biologists, as
traditional mechanicians may be surprised to learn. There is a
growing view that many functions of the cell are mechanical in
nature even though chemical signals play crucial roles in the
processes. Free energy barriers control transitions between
different conformations of vir- ally every macromolecule including
DNA, RNA, the adhesion protein integrin, the motor protein myosin,
and the proteins vinculin and talin that link the cytoskeleton to
focal adhesions. The strain energy can be a signi?cant component of
the total free energy barrier. For binding to take place, the
macromolecules need to be in conf- mational states that expose
chemical groups without steric hinderance. The kinetics of chemical
reactions are therefore strongly in?uenced by the conformational
strain energy.
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