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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(48): e2205637119, 2022 11 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36417440

ABSTRACT

We investigate analytically and numerically a basic model of driven Brownian motion with a velocity-dependent friction coefficient in nonlinear viscoelastic media featured by a stress plateau at intermediate shear velocities and profound memory effects. For constant force driving, we show that nonlinear oscillations of a microparticle velocity and position emerge by a Hopf bifurcation at a small critical force (first dynamical phase transition), where the friction's nonlinearity seems to be wholly negligible. They also disappear by a second Hopf bifurcation at a much larger force value (second dynamical phase transition). The bifurcation diagram is found in an analytical form confirmed by numerics. Surprisingly, the particles' inertial and the medium's nonlinear properties remain crucial even in a parameter regime where they were earlier considered entirely negligible. Depending on the force and other parameters, the amplitude of oscillations can significantly exceed the size of the particles, and their period can span several time decades, primarily determined by the memory time of the medium. Such oscillations can also be thermally excited near the edges of dynamical phase transitions. The second dynamical phase transition combined with thermally induced stochastic limit cycle oscillations leads to a giant enhancement of diffusion over the limit of vast driving forces, where an effective linearization of stochastic dynamics occurs.


Subject(s)
Diffusion , Phase Transition , Motion
2.
Phys Rev E ; 104(3-1): 034125, 2021 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34654105

ABSTRACT

Many experimental studies revealed subdiffusion of various nanoparticles in diverse polymer and colloidal solutions, cytosol and plasma membrane of biological cells, which are viscoelastic and, at the same time, highly inhomogeneous randomly fluctuating environments. The observed subdiffusion often combines features of ergodic fractional Brownian motion (reflecting viscoelasticity) and nonergodic jumplike non-Markovian diffusional processes (reflecting disorder). Accordingly, several theories were proposed to explain puzzling experimental findings. Below we show that some of the significant and profound published experimental results are better rationalized within the viscoelastic subdiffusion approach in random environments, which is based on generalized Langevin dynamics in random potentials, than some earlier proposed theories.

3.
Phys Rev Lett ; 127(11): 110601, 2021 Sep 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34558948

ABSTRACT

We investigate a basic model of nonlinear Brownian motion in a thermal environment, where nonlinear friction interpolates between viscous Stokes and dry Coulomb friction. We show that superdiffusion and supertransport emerge as a nonequilibrium critical phenomenon when such a Brownian motion is driven out of thermal equilibrium by a constant force. Precisely at the edge of a phase transition, velocity fluctuations diverge asymptotically and diffusion becomes superballistic. The autocorrelation function of velocity fluctuations in this nonergodic regime exhibits a striking aging behavior.

4.
Phys Rev E ; 102(1-1): 012139, 2020 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32794961

ABSTRACT

Hydrodynamic memory force or Basset force has been known since the 19th century. Its influence on Brownian motion remains, however, mostly unexplored. Here we investigate its role in nonlinear transport and diffusion within a paradigmatic model of tilted washboard potential. In this model, a giant enhancement of driven diffusion over its potential-free limit [Phys. Rev. Lett. 87, 010602 (2001)PRLTAO0031-900710.1103/PhysRevLett.87.010602] presents a well-established paradoxical phenomenon. In the overdamped limit, it occurs at a critical tilt of vanishing potential barriers. However, for weak damping, it takes place surprisingly at another critical tilt, where the potential barriers are clearly expressed. Recently we showed [Phys. Rev. Lett. 123, 180603 (2019)PRLTAO0031-900710.1103/PhysRevLett.123.180603] that Basset force could make such a diffusion enhancement enormously large. In this paper, we discover that even for moderately strong damping, where the overdamped theory works very well when the memory effects are negligible, substantial hydrodynamic memory unexpectedly makes a strong impact. First, the diffusion boost occurs at nonvanishing potential barriers and can be orders of magnitude larger. Second, transient anomalous diffusion regimes emerge over many time decades and potential periods. Third, particles' mobility can also be dramatically enhanced, and a long transient supertransport regime emerges.

5.
Phys Rev Lett ; 123(23): 238902, 2019 12 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31868495
6.
Phys Rev Lett ; 123(18): 180603, 2019 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31763886

ABSTRACT

Diffusion in tilted washboard potentials can paradoxically exceed free normal diffusion. The effect becomes much stronger in the underdamped case due to inertial effects. What happens upon inclusion of usually neglected fractional hydrodynamics memory effects (Basset-Boussinesq frictional force), which result in a heavy algebraic tail of the velocity autocorrelation function of the potential-free diffusion making it transiently superdiffusive? Will a giant enhancement of diffusion become even stronger, and the transient superdiffusion last even longer? These are the questions that we answer in this Letter based on an accurate numerical investigation. We show that a resonancelike enhancement of normal diffusion becomes indeed much stronger and sharper. Moreover, a long-lasting transient regime of superdiffusion, including Richardson-like diffusion, ⟨δx^{2}(t)⟩∝t^{3} and ballistic supertransport, ⟨δx(t)⟩∝t^{2}, is revealed.

7.
Phys Rev E ; 99(5-1): 052136, 2019 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31212539

ABSTRACT

The dissipative curve-crossing problem provides a paradigm for electron-transfer (ET) processes in condensed media. It establishes the simplest conceptual test bed to study the influence of the medium's dynamics on ET kinetics both on the ensemble level, and on the level of single particles. Single electron description is particularly important for nanoscaled systems like proteins, or molecular wires. Especially insightful is this framework in the semiclassical limit, where the environment can be treated classically, and an exact analytical treatment becomes feasible. Slow medium's dynamics is capable of enslaving ET and bringing it on the ensemble level from a quantum regime of nonadiabatic tunneling to the classical adiabatic regime, where electrons follow the nuclei rearrangements. This classical adiabatic textbook picture contradicts, however, in a very spectacular fashion to the statistics of single electron transitions, even in the Debye, memoryless media, also named Ohmic in the parlance of the famed spin-boson model. On the single particle level, ET always remains quantum, and this was named a quantum breaking of ergodicity in the adiabatic ET regime. What happens in the case of subdiffusive, fractional, or sub-Ohmic medium's dynamics, which is featured by power-law decaying dynamical memory effects typical, e.g., for protein macromolecules, and other viscoelastic media? Such a memory is vividly manifested by anomalous Cole-Cole dielectric response in such media. We address this question based both on accurate numerics and analytical theory. The ensemble theory remarkably agrees with the numerical dynamics of electronic populations, revealing a power-law relaxation tail even in a profoundly nonadiabatic electron transfer regime. In other words, ET in such media should typically display fractional kinetics. However, a profound difference with the numerically accurate results occurs for the distribution of residence times in the electronic states, both on the ensemble level and the level of single trajectories. Ergodicity is broken dynamically even in a more spectacular way than in the memoryless case. Our results question the applicability of all the existing and widely accepted ensemble theories of electron transfer in fractional, sub-Ohmic environments, on the level of single molecules, and provide a real challenge to face, both for theorists and experimentalists.

8.
Biosystems ; 177: 56-65, 2019 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30419266

ABSTRACT

Multiple experiments show that various submicron particles such as magnetosomes, RNA messengers, viruses, and even much smaller nanoparticles such as globular proteins diffuse anomalously slow in viscoelastic cytosol of living cells. Hence, their sufficiently fast directional transport by molecular motors such as kinesins is crucial for the cell operation. It has been shown recently that the traditional flashing Brownian ratchet models of molecular motors are capable to describe both normal and anomalous transport of such subdiffusing cargos by molecular motors with a very high efficiency. This work elucidates further an important role of mechanochemical coupling in such an anomalous transport. It shows a natural emergence of a perfect subdiffusive ratchet regime due to allosteric effects, where the random rotations of a "catalytic wheel" at the heart of the motor operation become perfectly synchronized with the random stepping of a heavily loaded motor, so that only one ATP molecule is consumed on average at each motor step along microtubule. However, the number of rotations made by the catalytic engine and the traveling distance both scale sublinearly in time. Nevertheless, this anomalous transport can be very fast in absolute terms.


Subject(s)
Computer Simulation , Cytosol/metabolism , Macromolecular Substances/metabolism , Molecular Motor Proteins/metabolism , Viscoelastic Substances/chemistry , Biological Transport , Diffusion , Markov Chains , Models, Theoretical , Viscosity
9.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 20(37): 24140-24155, 2018 Oct 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30206605

ABSTRACT

Viscoelastic subdiffusion governed by a fractional Langevin equation is studied numerically in a random Gaussian environment modeled by stationary Gaussian potentials with decaying spatial correlations. This anomalous diffusion is archetypal for living cells, where cytoplasm is known to be viscoelastic and a spatial disorder also naturally emerges. We obtain some first important insights into it within a model one-dimensional study. Two basic types of potential correlations are studied: short-range exponentially decaying and algebraically slow decaying with an infinite correlation length, both for a moderate (several kBT, in the units of thermal energy), and strong (5-10kBT) disorder. For a moderate disorder, it is shown that on the ensemble level viscoelastic subdiffusion can easily overcome the medium's disorder. Asymptotically, it is not distinguishable from the disorder-free subdiffusion. However, a strong scatter in single-trajectory averages is nevertheless seen even for a moderate disorder. It features a weak ergodicity breaking, which occurs on a very long yet transient time scale. Furthermore, for a strong disorder, a very long transient regime of logarithmic, Sinai-type diffusion emerges. It can last longer and be faster in the absolute terms for weakly decaying correlations as compared with the short-range correlations. Residence time distributions in a finite spatial domain are of a generalized log-normal type and are reminiscent also of a stretched exponential distribution. They can be easily confused for power-law distributions in view of the observed weak ergodicity breaking. This suggests a revision of some experimental data and their interpretation.

10.
Sensors (Basel) ; 18(3)2018 Feb 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29495645

ABSTRACT

[-15]Magnetic nanoparticles are met across many biological species ranging from magnetosensitive bacteria, fishes, bees, bats, rats, birds, to humans. They can be both of biogenetic origin and due to environmental contamination, being either in paramagnetic or ferromagnetic state. The energy of such naturally occurring single-domain magnetic nanoparticles can reach up to 10-20 room k B T in the magnetic field of the Earth, which naturally led to supposition that they can serve as sensory elements in various animals. This work explores within a stochastic modeling framework a fascinating hypothesis of magnetosensitive ion channels with magnetic nanoparticles serving as sensory elements, especially, how realistic it is given a highly dissipative viscoelastic interior of living cells and typical sizes of nanoparticles possibly involved.

11.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 19(4): 3056-3066, 2017 Jan 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28079204

ABSTRACT

Can the statistical properties of single-electron transfer events be correctly predicted within a common equilibrium ensemble description? This fundamental in nanoworld question of ergodic behavior is scrutinized within a very basic semi-classical curve-crossing problem. It is shown that in the limit of non-adiabatic electron transfer (weak tunneling) well-described by the Marcus-Levich-Dogonadze (MLD) rate the answer is yes. However, in the limit of the so-called solvent-controlled adiabatic electron transfer, a profound breaking of ergodicity occurs. Namely, a common description based on the ensemble reduced density matrix with an initial equilibrium distribution of the reaction coordinate is not able to reproduce the statistics of single-trajectory events in this seemingly classical regime. For sufficiently large activation barriers, the ensemble survival probability in a state remains nearly exponential with the inverse rate given by the sum of the adiabatic curve crossing (Kramers) time and the inverse MLD rate. In contrast, near to the adiabatic regime, the single-electron survival probability is clearly non-exponential, even though it possesses an exponential tail which agrees well with the ensemble description. Initially, it is well described by a Mittag-Leffler distribution with a fractional rate. Paradoxically, the mean transfer time in this classical on the ensemble level regime is well described by the inverse of the nonadiabatic quantum tunneling rate on a single particle level. An analytical theory is developed which perfectly agrees with stochastic simulations and explains our findings.

12.
Phys Rev E ; 96(5-1): 052134, 2017 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29347675

ABSTRACT

Logarithmic or Sinai-type subdiffusion is usually associated with random force disorder and nonstationary potential fluctuations whose root-mean-squared amplitude grows with distance. We show here that extremely persistent, macroscopic logarithmic diffusion also universally emerges at sufficiently low temperatures in stationary Gaussian random potentials with spatially decaying correlations, known to exist in a broad range of physical systems. Combining results from extensive simulations with a scaling approach we elucidate the physical mechanism of this unusual subdiffusion. In particular, we explain why with growing temperature and/or time a first crossover occurs to standard, power-law subdiffusion, with a time-dependent power-law exponent, and then a second crossover occurs to normal diffusion with a disorder-renormalized diffusion coefficient. Interestingly, the initial, nominally ultraslow diffusion turns out to be much faster than the universal de Gennes-Bässler-Zwanzig limit of the renormalized normal diffusion, which realistically cannot be attained at sufficiently low temperatures and/or for strong disorder. The ultraslow diffusion is also shown to be nonergodic and it displays a local bias phenomenon. Our simple scaling theory not only explains our numerical findings but qualitatively also has a predictive character.

13.
Beilstein J Nanotechnol ; 7: 328-50, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27335728

ABSTRACT

The main physical features and operating principles of isothermal nanomachines in the microworld, common to both classical and quantum machines, are reviewed. Special attention is paid to the dual, constructive role of dissipation and thermal fluctuations, the fluctuation-dissipation theorem, heat losses and free energy transduction, thermodynamic efficiency, and thermodynamic efficiency at maximum power. Several basic models are considered and discussed to highlight generic physical features. This work examines some common fallacies that continue to plague the literature. In particular, the erroneous beliefs that one should minimize friction and lower the temperature for high performance of Brownian machines, and that the thermodynamic efficiency at maximum power cannot exceed one-half are discussed. The emerging topic of anomalous molecular motors operating subdiffusively but very efficiently in the viscoelastic environment of living cells is also discussed.

14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26565276

ABSTRACT

We propose and study a model of hypothetical magnetosensitive ionic channels which are long thought to be a possible candidate to explain the influence of weak magnetic fields on living organisms ranging from magnetotactic bacteria to fishes, birds, rats, bats, and other mammals including humans. The core of the model is provided by a short chain of magnetosomes serving as a sensor, which is coupled by elastic linkers to the gating elements of ion channels forming a small cluster in the cell membrane. The magnetic sensor is fixed by one end on cytoskeleton elements attached to the membrane and is exposed to viscoelastic cytosol. Its free end can reorient stochastically and subdiffusively in viscoelastic cytosol responding to external magnetic field changes and can open the gates of coupled ion channels. The sensor dynamics is generally bistable due to bistability of the gates which can be in two states with probabilities which depend on the sensor orientation. For realistic parameters, it is shown that this model channel can operate in the magnetic field of Earth for a small number (five to seven) of single-domain magnetosomes constituting the sensor rod, each of which has a typical size found in magnetotactic bacteria and other organisms or even just one sufficiently large nanoparticle of a characteristic size also found in nature. It is shown that, due to the viscoelasticity of the medium, the bistable gating dynamics generally exhibits power law and stretched exponential distributions of the residence times of the channels in their open and closed states. This provides a generic physical mechanism for the explanation of the origin of such anomalous kinetics for other ionic channels whose sensors move in a viscoelastic environment provided by either cytosol or biological membrane, in a quite general context, beyond the fascinating hypothesis of magnetosensitive ionic channels we explore.


Subject(s)
Ion Channels/metabolism , Magnetic Fields , Models, Biological , Animals , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Computer Simulation , Cytosol/metabolism , Humans , Intramolecular Transferases , Nonlinear Dynamics , Stochastic Processes , Viscosity
15.
Phys Biol ; 12(1): 016013, 2015 Jan 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25635368

ABSTRACT

Here we generalize our previous model of molecular motors trafficking subdiffusing cargos in viscoelastic cytosol by (i) including mechano-chemical coupling between cyclic conformational fluctuations of the motor protein driven by the reaction of ATP hydrolysis and its translational motion within the simplest two-state model of hand-over-hand motion of kinesin, and also (ii) by taking into account the anharmonicity of the tether between the motor and the cargo (its maximally possible extension length). It is shown that the major earlier results such as occurrence of normal versus anomalous transport depending on the amplitude of binding potential, cargo size and the motor turnover frequency not only survive in this more realistic model, but the results also look very similar for the correspondingly adjusted parameters. However, this more realistic model displays a substantially larger thermodynamic efficiency due to a bidirectional mechano-chemical coupling. For realistic parameters, the maximal thermodynamic efficiency can transiently be about 50% as observed for kinesins, and even larger, surprisingly also in a novel strongly anomalous (sub)transport regime, where the motor enzymatic turnovers become also anomalously slow and cannot be characterized by a turnover rate. Here anomalously slow dynamics of the cargo enforces anomalously slow cyclic kinetics of the motor protein.


Subject(s)
Kinesins/metabolism , Biological Transport , Diffusion , Kinetics , Thermodynamics
16.
Phys Rev Lett ; 113(10): 100601, 2014 Sep 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25238342

ABSTRACT

Normal diffusion in corrugated potentials with spatially uncorrelated Gaussian energy disorder famously explains the origin of non-Arrhenius exp[-σ2/(kBT2)] temperature dependence in disordered systems. Here we show that unbiased diffusion remains asymptotically normal also in the presence of spatial correlations decaying to zero. However, because of a temporal lack of self-averaging, transient subdiffusion emerges on the mesoscale, and it can readily reach macroscale even for moderately strong disorder fluctuations of σ∼4-5kT. Because of its nonergodic origin, such subdiffusion exhibits a large scatter in single-trajectory averages. However, at odds with intuition, it occurs essentially faster than one expects from the normal diffusion in the absence of correlations. We apply these results to diffusion of regulatory proteins on DNA molecules and predict that such diffusion should be anomalous, but much faster than earlier expected on a typical length of genes for a realistic energy disorder of several room kBT, or merely 0.05-0.075 eV.


Subject(s)
DNA/chemistry , Models, Chemical , Proteins/chemistry , Diffusion , Thermodynamics
17.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 16(31): 16524-35, 2014 Aug 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24985765

ABSTRACT

The discovery of anomalous diffusion of larger biopolymers and submicron tracers such as endogenous granules, organelles, or virus capsids in living cells, attributed to the viscoelastic nature of the cytoplasm, provokes the question whether this complex environment equally impacts the active intracellular transport of submicron cargos by molecular motors such as kinesins: does the passive anomalous diffusion of free cargo always imply its anomalously slow active transport by motors, the mean transport distance along microtubule growing sublinearly rather than linearly in time? Here we analyze this question within the widely used two-state Brownian ratchet model of kinesin motors based on the continuous-state diffusion along microtubules driven by a flashing binding potential, where the cargo particle is elastically attached to the motor. Depending on the cargo size, the loading force, the amplitude of the binding potential, the turnover frequency of the molecular motor enzyme, and the linker stiffness we demonstrate that the motor transport may turn out either normal or anomalous, as indeed measured experimentally. We show how a highly efficient normal active transport mediated by motors may emerge despite the passive anomalous diffusion of the cargo, and study the intricate effects of the elastic linker. Under different, well specified conditions the microtubule-based motor transport becomes anomalously slow and thus significantly less efficient.


Subject(s)
Cytosol/chemistry , Elasticity , Molecular Motor Proteins/physiology , Viscosity , Thermodynamics
18.
PLoS One ; 9(3): e91700, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24626511

ABSTRACT

Recent experiments reveal both passive subdiffusion of various nanoparticles and anomalous active transport of such particles by molecular motors in the molecularly crowded environment of living biological cells. Passive and active microrheology reveals that the origin of this anomalous dynamics is due to the viscoelasticity of the intracellular fluid. How do molecular motors perform in such a highly viscous, dissipative environment? Can we explain the observed co-existence of the anomalous transport of relatively large particles of 100 to 500 nm in size by kinesin motors with the normal transport of smaller particles by the same molecular motors? What is the efficiency of molecular motors in the anomalous transport regime? Here we answer these seemingly conflicting questions and consistently explain experimental findings in a generalization of the well-known continuous diffusion model for molecular motors with two conformational states in which viscoelastic effects are included.


Subject(s)
Endosomes/metabolism , Kinesins/metabolism , Models, Theoretical , Molecular Motor Proteins/metabolism , Biological Transport , Cytosol/metabolism , Diffusion , Endosomes/chemistry , Hydrodynamics , Kinesins/chemistry , Molecular Motor Proteins/chemistry , Rheology , Thermodynamics , Viscosity
19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23767499

ABSTRACT

We study subdiffusive overdamped Brownian ratchets periodically rocked by an external zero-mean force in viscoelastic media within the framework of a non-Markovian generalized Langevin equation approach and associated multidimensional Markovian embedding dynamics. Viscoelastic deformations of the medium caused by the transport particle are modeled by a set of auxiliary Brownian quasiparticles elastically coupled to the transport particle and characterized by a hierarchy of relaxation times which obey a fractal scaling. The most slowly relaxing deformations which cannot immediately follow to the moving particle imprint long-range memory about its previous positions and cause subdiffusion and anomalous transport on a sufficiently long time scale. This anomalous behavior is combined with normal diffusion and transport on an initial time scale of overdamped motion. Anomalously slow directed transport in a periodic ratchet potential with broken space inversion symmetry emerges due to a violation of the thermal detailed balance by a zero-mean periodic driving and is optimized with frequency of driving, its amplitude, and temperature. Such optimized anomalous transport can be low dispersive and characterized by a large generalized Peclet number. Moreover, we show that overdamped subdiffusive ratchets can sustain a substantial load and do useful work. The corresponding thermodynamic efficiency decays algebraically in time since the useful work done against a load scales sublinearly with time following to the transport particle position, but the energy pumped by an external force scales with time linearly. Nevertheless, it can be transiently appreciably high and compare well with the thermodynamical efficiency of the normal diffusion overdamped ratchets on sufficiently long temporal and spatial scales.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Diffusion , Energy Transfer , Markov Chains , Models, Statistical , Thermodynamics , Computer Simulation , Elasticity , Viscosity
20.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 85(5 Pt 1): 051131, 2012 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23004727

ABSTRACT

We study fluctuating tilt Brownian ratchets based on fractional subdiffusion in sticky viscoelastic media characterized by a power law memory kernel. Unlike the normal diffusion case, the rectification effect vanishes in the adiabatically slow modulation limit and optimizes in a driving frequency range. It is shown also that the anomalous rectification effect is maximal (stochastic resonance effect) at optimal temperature and can be of surprisingly good quality. Moreover, subdiffusive current can flow in the counterintuitive direction upon a change of temperature or driving frequency. The dependence of anomalous transport on load exhibits a remarkably simple universality.

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