Abstract

Molecular transport in living systems regulates numerous processes underlying biological function. Although many cellular components exhibit anomalous diffusion, only recently has the subdiffusive motion been associated with nonergodic behavior. These findings have stimulated new questions for their implications in statistical mechanics and cell biology. Is nonergodicity a common strategy shared by living systems? Which physical mechanisms generate it? What are its implications for biological function? Here, we use single particle tracking to demonstrate that the motion of DC-SIGN, a receptor with unique pathogen recognition capabilities, reveals nonergodic subdiffusion on living cell membranes. In contrast to previous studies, this behavior is incompatible with transient immobilization and therefore it can not be interpreted according to continuous time random walk theory. We show that the receptor undergoes changes of diffusivity, consistent with the current view of the cell membrane as a highly dynamic and diverse environment. Simulations based on a model of ordinary random walk in complex media quantitatively reproduce all our observations, pointing toward diffusion heterogeneity as the cause of DC-SIGN behavior. By studying different receptor mutants, we further correlate receptor motion to its molecular structure, thus establishing a strong link between nonergodicity and biological function. These results underscore the role of disorder in cell membranes and its connection with function regulation. Due to its generality, our approach offers a framework to interpret anomalous transport in other complex media where dynamic heterogeneity might play a major role, such as those found, e.g., in soft condensed matter, geology and ecology.

Highlights

  • Cell function relies heavily on the occurrence of biochemical interactions between specific molecules

  • Is nonergodicity a common strategy shared by living systems? Which physical mechanisms generate it? What are its implications for biological function? Here, we use single-particle tracking to demonstrate that the motion of dendritic cell-specific intercellular adhesion molecule 3-grabbing nonintegrin (DC-SIGN), a receptor with unique pathogen-recognition capabilities, reveals nonergodic subdiffusion on living-cell membranes In contrast to previous studies, this behavior is incompatible with transient immobilization, and, it cannot be interpreted according to continuous-time random-walk theory

  • We have demonstrated that the DC-SIGN receptor displays subdiffusive dynamics, characterized by weak ergodicity breaking and aging

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Cell function relies heavily on the occurrence of biochemical interactions between specific molecules. Several stochastic models presenting nonstationary (and nonergodic) subdiffusion have been proposed [20,28,29,30,31] Among these models, CTRW has been used to model nonergodic subdiffusion in living cells [9,10,12] and has begun to provide theoretical insight into the physical origin of WEB in biological systems [28], associating the nonergodic behavior with the occurrence of particle immobilization with a heavy-tailed distribution of trapping times. These results allow us to link receptor transport to molecular structure and receptor function, such as the capability to capture and uptake pathogens

WEAK ERGODICITY BREAKING AND AGING IN DC-SIGN DYNAMICS
FAILURE OF THE CTRW MODEL
DC-SIGN DISPLAY CHANGES OF DIFFUSIVITY
DYNAMICS OF RECEPTOR MUTANTS
NONERGODICITY AND BIOLOGICAL FUNCTION
Findings
CONCLUSIONS AND OUTLOOK

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