• Title/Summary/Keyword: buckling of intermediate filaments

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Buckling influence of intermediate filaments with and without surface effects

  • Taj, Muhammad;Khadimallah, Mohamed A.;Ayed, Hamdi;Hussain, Muzamal;Mahmood, Shaid;Ahmad, Imtiaz
    • Advances in nano research
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    • v.12 no.4
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    • pp.365-374
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    • 2022
  • Intermediate filaments are the mechanical ropes for both cytoskeleton and nucleoskeleton of the cell which provide tensile force to these skeletons. In providing the mechanical support to the cell, they are likely to buckle. We used conventional Euler buckling model to find the critical buckling force under different boundary conditions which they assume during different functions. However, there are many experimental and theoretical studies about other cytoskeleton components which demonstrate that due to mechanical coupling with the surrounding surface, the critical buckling force increases considerably. Motivated with these results, we also investigated the influence of surface effects on the critical buckling force of intermediate filaments. The surface effects become profound because of increasing ratio of surface area of intermediate filaments to bulk at nano-scale. The model has been solved analytically to obtain relations for the critical forces for the buckling of intermediate filaments without and with surface effects. We found that critical buckling force with surface effects increases to a large extent due to mechanical coupling of intermediate filaments with the surrounding surface. Our study may be useful to develop a unified experimental protocol to characterize the physical properties of Intermediate filaments and may be helpful in understanding many biological phenomenon involving intermediate filaments.

Buckling behavior of intermediate filaments based on Euler Bernoulli and Timoshenko beam theories

  • Muhammad Taj;Muzamal Hussain;Mohamed A. Khadimallah;Muhammad Safeer;S.R. Mahmoud;Zafer Iqbal;Mohamed R. Ali;Aqib Majeed;Abdelouahed Tounsi;Manzoor Ahmad
    • Advances in concrete construction
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    • v.15 no.3
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    • pp.171-178
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    • 2023
  • Cytoskeleton components play key role in maintaining cell structure and in giving shape to the cell. These components include microtubules, microfilaments and intermediate filaments. Among these filaments intermediate filaments are the most rigid and bear large compressive force. Actually, these filaments are surrounded by other filaments like microtubules and microfilaments. This network of filaments makes a layer as a surface on intermediate filaments that have great impact on buckling behavior of intermediate filaments. In the present article, buckling behavior of intermediate filaments is studied by taking into account the effects of surface by using Euler Bernoulli and Timoshenko beam theories. It is found that effects of surface greatly affect the critical buckling force of intermediate filaments. Further, it is observed that the critical buckling force is inversely proportional to the length of filament. Such types of observations are helpful for further analysis of nanofibrous in their actual environments within the cell.

Effect of external force on buckling of cytoskeleton intermediate filaments within viscoelastic media

  • Taj, Muhammad;Safeer, Muhammad;Hussain, Muzamal;Naeem, Muhammad N.;Ahmad, Manzoor;Abbas, Kamran;Khan, Abdul Q.;Tounsi, Abdelouahed
    • Computers and Concrete
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    • v.25 no.3
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    • pp.205-214
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    • 2020
  • Cytoskeleton components in living cell bear large compressive force and are responsible in maintaining the cell shape. Actually these filaments are surrounded by viscoelastic media within the cell. This surrounding, viscoelastic media affects the buckling behavior of these filaments when external force is applied on these filaments by exerting continuous pressure in opposite directions to the incipient buckling of the filaments. In this article a mechanical model is applied to account the effects of this media on the buckling behavior of intermediate filaments network of cytoskeleton. The model immeasurably associates; filament's bending rigidity, adjacent system elasticity, and cytosol viscosity with buckling wavelength, buckling growth rate and buckling amplitude of the filaments.

Bending behavior of microfilaments in living cell with nonlocal effects

  • Muhammad Safeer;Muhammad Taj;Mohamed A. Khadimallah;Muzamal Hussain;Saima Akram;Faisal Mehmood Butt;Abdelouahed Tounsi
    • Advances in nano research
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    • v.15 no.1
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    • pp.15-23
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    • 2023
  • Dynamics of protein filamentous has been an active area of research since the last few decades as the role of cytoskeletal components, microtubules, intermediate filaments and microfilaments is very important in cell functions. During cell functions, these components undergo the deformations like bending, buckling and vibrations. In the present paper, bending and buckling of microfilaments are studied by using Euler Bernoulli beam theory with nonlocal parametric effects in conjunction. The obtained results show that the nonlocal parametric effects are not ignorable and the applications of nonlocal parameters well agree with the experimental verifications.