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Biophysical Journal 51: 745-753 (1987)
© 1987 the Biophysical Society

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Nonideality of volume flows and phase transitions of F-actin solutions in response to osmotic stress.

T Ito, K S Zaner and T P Stossel

ABSTRACT

Ovalbumin and G-actin solutions decreased their volume in a concentration-dependent manner in response to an osmotic stress, arising from an osmotic pressure gradient of 5-20 cm H2O at 25 degrees C, at protein concentrations as high as 20 mg/ml. In contrast, solutions of F-actin exhibited a concentration-dependent decrease in their rate of volume change in response to the osmotic stress. Shortening of F-actin by gelsolin did not affect this decrease, suggesting that the elastic response of the filaments underlies the osmotically nonideal behavior. However, above a critical actin concentration of approximately 7 mg/ml, no volume change occurred in response to osmotic gradients as high as 20 cm H2O. The concentration at which this critical phenomenon occurred and its abolition by shortening of F-actin by gelsolin suggest that a transition of diffusible rods to a glassy state is the cause of this critical phenomenon. Above the critical concentration, an increase in the osmotic pressure applied to an F-actin solution to greater than 20 cm H2O produced a transient increase in flow rate to that expected for a solution containing no polymer. This finding may represent a transition from an isotropic glassy state to an anisotropic and heterogeneous one wherein regions of pure solvent coexist with domains of pure polymer.




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F. LANG, G. L. BUSCH, M. RITTER, H. VOLKL, S. WALDEGGER, E. GULBINS, and D. HAUSSINGER
Functional Significance of Cell Volume Regulatory Mechanisms
Physiol Rev, January 1, 1998; 78(1): 247 - 306.
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Copyright © 1987 by the Biophysical Society.