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      Anomalous Diffusion in Living Yeast Cells

      Physical review letters
      American Physical Society (APS)

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          Single-particle tracking: applications to membrane dynamics.

          Measurements of trajectories of individual proteins or lipids in the plasma membrane of cells show a variety of types of motion. Brownian motion is observed, but many of the particles undergo non-Brownian motion, including directed motion, confined motion, and anomalous diffusion. The variety of motion leads to significant effects on the kinetics of reactions among membrane-bound species and requires a revision of existing views of membrane structure and dynamics.
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            Scaling the microrheology of living cells.

            We report a scaling law that governs both the elastic and frictional properties of a wide variety of living cell types, over a wide range of time scales and under a variety of biological interventions. This scaling identifies these cells as soft glassy materials existing close to a glass transition, and implies that cytoskeletal proteins may regulate cell mechanical properties mainly by modulating the effective noise temperature of the matrix. The practical implications are that the effective noise temperature is an easily quantified measure of the ability of the cytoskeleton to deform, flow, and reorganize.
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              Power spectrum analysis for optical tweezers

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                10.1103/PhysRevLett.93.078102
                http://link.aps.org/licenses/aps-default-license

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