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We examine the interactions between actively rotating proteins moving in a membrane. Experimental evidence suggests that such rotor proteins, like the ATP synthases of the inner mitochondrial membrane, can arrange themselves into lattices. We show that crystallization is possible through a combination of hydrodynamic and repulsive interactions between the rotor proteins. In particular, hydrodynamic interactions induce rotational motion of the rotor protein assembly that, in the presence of repulsion, drives the system into a hexagonal lattice. The entire crystal rotates with an angular velocity which increases with motor density and decreases with lattice diameter - larger and sparser arrays rotate at a slower pace. The rotational interactions allow ensembles of proteins to sample configurations and reach an ordered steady state, which are inaccessible to the quenched nonrotational system. Rotational interactions thus act as a sort of temperature that removes disorder, except that actual thermal diffusion leads to expansion and loss of order. In contrast, the rotational interactions are bounded in space. Hence, once an ordered state is reached, it is maintained at all times.
We study the flow of membranal fluid through a ring of immobile particles mimicking, for example, a fence around a membrane corral. We obtain a simple closed-form expression for the permeability coefficient of the ring as a function of the particles
We show using theory and experiments that a small particle moving along an elastic membrane through a viscous fluid is repelled from the membrane due to hydro-elastic forces. The viscous stress field produces an elastic disturbance leading to particl
We carry out a coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulation of phospholipid vesicles with transmembrane proteins. We measure the mean and Gaussian curvatures of our protein-embedded vesicles and quantitatively show how protein clusters change the sha
Cell motility in viscous fluids is ubiquitous and affects many biological processes, including reproduction, infection, and the marine life ecosystem. Here we review the biophysical and mechanical principles of locomotion at the small scales relevant
We present a multi-scale modeling and simulation framework for low-Reynolds number hydrodynamics of shape-changing immersed objects, e.g., biological microswimmers and active surfaces. The key idea is to consider principal shape changes as generalize