Title of article
Ground-based methods reproduce space-flight experiments and show that weak vibrations trigger microtubule self-organisation Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Nicolas Glade، نويسنده , , Eric Beaugnon، نويسنده , , James Tabony، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
6
From page
1
To page
6
Abstract
The effect of weightlessness on physical and biological systems is frequently studied by experiments in space. However, on the ground, gravity effects may also be strongly attenuated using methods such as magnetic levitation and clinorotation. Under suitable conditions, in vitro preparations of microtubules, a major element of the cytoskeleton, self-organise by a process of reaction–diffusion: self-organisation is triggered by gravity and samples prepared in space do not self-organise. Here, we report experiments carried out with ground-based methods of clinorotation and magnetic levitation. The behaviour observed closely resembles that of the space-flight experiment and suggests that many space experiments could be carried out equally well on the ground. Using clinorotation, we find that weak vibrations also trigger microtubule self-organisation and have an effect similar to gravity. Thus, in some in vitro biological systems, vibrations are a countermeasure to weightlessness.
Keywords
Weak vibrations , microtubules , self-organisation , Weightlessness , Magnetic levitation , Reaction–diffusion , Clinorotation , Complex systems
Journal title
Biophysical Chemistry
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Biophysical Chemistry
Record number
1119641
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