Abstract
BACKGROUND: Respiratory ciliary motion is enabled by dynein/microtubule activity. Current observation techniques can hardly capture the dynein activation pattern in moving cilia. Here we introduce a computational model to mimic the ciliary ultrastructure and simulate the dynein-driven ciliary motion. METHODS: A three-dimensional model is established to mimic the "9 + 2" ciliary ultrastructure. The dynein force is simulated as point loads embedded along the microtubules. The dynein-triggered ciliary motion is solved by using the Finite Element Method along with grid deformation techniques. RESULTS: By comparing the simulated ciliary movement to the observation results, the rationality of different dynein activity hypotheses are evaluated and the dynein activation pattern that can produce the planar beating of lung cilia is proposed. The results also reveal that the dynein force alone can only generate longitudinal microtubule sliding and ciliary bending; to produce the ciliary curl-up' movement, transverse forces (possibly induced by radial spokes) need to be considered. CONCLUSION: This model provides a platform to investigate various assumptions of dynein activity, facilitating us to evaluate their rationality and propose possible dynein activation patterns.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | S577-S586 |
Journal | Technology and Health Care |
Volume | 23 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 17 Jun 2015 |
Keywords
- Respiratory cilia
- dynein
- finite element method
- ultrastructure