Buxbaum R E, Dennerll T, Weiss S, Heidemann S R
Science. 1987 Mar 20;235(4795):1511-4. doi: 10.1126/science.2881354.
The viscosity of F-actin and microtubule suspensions has been measured as a function of shear rate with a Weissenberg rheogoniometer. At shear rates of less than 1.0 per second the viscosity of suspensions of these two structural proteins is inversely proportional to shear rate. These results are consistent with previous in vivo measurements of the viscosity of cytoplasm. This power law implies that shear stress is independent of shear rate; that is, shear stress is a constant at all shear rates less than 1.0 per second. Thus the flow profile of these fluids is indeterminate, or nearly so. This flow property may explain several aspects of intracellular motility in living cells. Possible explanations for this flow property are based on a recent model for semidilute suspensions of rigid rods or a classical friction model for liquid crystals.
使用魏森贝格流变仪测量了F-肌动蛋白和微管悬浮液的粘度与剪切速率的函数关系。在每秒小于1.0的剪切速率下,这两种结构蛋白悬浮液的粘度与剪切速率成反比。这些结果与之前对细胞质粘度的体内测量结果一致。这种幂律意味着剪切应力与剪切速率无关;也就是说,在每秒小于1.0的所有剪切速率下,剪切应力是一个常数。因此,这些流体的流动特性是不确定的,或者几乎是不确定的。这种流动特性可能解释了活细胞内细胞运动的几个方面。对这种流动特性的可能解释基于最近的刚性棒半稀释悬浮液模型或经典的液晶摩擦模型。