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      Traffic of single-headed motor proteins KIF1A: effects of lane changing

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          Abstract

          KIF1A kinesins are single-headed motor proteins which move on cylindrical nano-tubes called microtubules (MT). A normal MT consists of 13 protofilaments on which the equispaced motor binding sites form a periodic array. The collective movement of the kinesins on a MT is, therefore, analogous to vehicular traffic on multi-lane highways where each protofilament is the analogue of a single lane. Does lane-changing increase or decrease the motor flux per lane? We address this fundamental question here by appropriately extending a recent model [{\it Phys. Rev. E {\bf 75}, 041905 (2007)}]. By carrying out analytical calculations and computer simulations of this extended model, we predict that the flux per lane can increase or decrease with the increasing rate of lane changing, depending on the concentrations of motors and the rate of hydrolysis of ATP, the ``fuel'' molecules. Our predictions can be tested, in principle, by carrying out {\it in-vitro} experiments with fluorescently labelled KIF1A molecules.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          27 December 2007
          2008-04-17
          Article
          10.1103/PhysRevE.77.050902
          0712.4304
          992d930b-da7a-4953-afae-f43bdf1c305f
          History
          Custom metadata
          Physical Review E (Rapid Communication), vol.77, 050902 (R), (2008)
          4 pages REVTEX with 4 EPS figures; new schematic figure of the model
          physics.bio-ph cond-mat.stat-mech q-bio.SC

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