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- Mechanome abstract "The mechanome consists of the body, or ome, of data including cell and molecular processes relating to force and mechanical systems at molecular, cellular and tissue length scales, i.e. the fundamental "machine code" structures of the cell. The mechanome encompasses biological motors, like kinesin, myosin, RNAP, and Ribosome mechanical structures, like actin or the cytoskeleton, or processes, such as cytokinesis or chemotaxis. The mechanome seeks to understand the fundamental physical-mechanical processes and events that are common to biological function. An example at the molecular level includes the common structural designs used by kinesin and myosin motor proteins (such as dimer formation and mechanochemical cycles) that control their function and lead to properties such as processivity. The mechanome assembles the common features of these motors regardless of the "track" (microtubules, actin filaments, nucleotide based structures, membranes) they move on. A cytoskeletal example includes structures such as actin filament networks and bundles that can form from a variety of actin binding proteins that cross-link or bundle actin filaments leading to common mechanical changes of these structures. A cell machinery example includes common structures such as contractile ring formation formed by both actin and tubulin type structures leading to the same mechanical result of cell division.A definition of the "Mechanome" extending to cell/organ/body given by Prof. Roger Kamm, at the 5th World Congress of Biomechanics Munich, includes understanding:The complete state of stress existing from tissues to cells to molecules. The biological state that results from the distribution of forces. Requires knowledge of the distribution of force throughout the cell/organ/body, the functional interactions between these stresses and the fundamental biological processes."Mechanomics" is then the study of how forces are transmitted and the influence they have on biological function.Using mechanical force techniques, such as optical tweezers or atomic force microscopy, single proteins can be identified by a unique structural fingerprint .".
- Mechanome wikiPageExternalLink index.html.
- Mechanome wikiPageExternalLink 3676.
- Mechanome wikiPageExternalLink harvard_university.htm.
- Mechanome wikiPageID "5937599".
- Mechanome wikiPageLength "3111".
- Mechanome wikiPageOutDegree "15".
- Mechanome wikiPageRevisionID "552426381".
- Mechanome wikiPageWikiLink -ome.
- Mechanome wikiPageWikiLink Actin.
- Mechanome wikiPageWikiLink Atomic_force_microscope.
- Mechanome wikiPageWikiLink Atomic_force_microscopy.
- Mechanome wikiPageWikiLink Biomechanics.
- Mechanome wikiPageWikiLink Category:Biomechanics.
- Mechanome wikiPageWikiLink Chemotaxis.
- Mechanome wikiPageWikiLink Contractile_ring.
- Mechanome wikiPageWikiLink Cytokinesis.
- Mechanome wikiPageWikiLink Cytoskeleton.
- Mechanome wikiPageWikiLink Kinesin.
- Mechanome wikiPageWikiLink MIT.
- Mechanome wikiPageWikiLink Massachusetts_Institute_of_Technology.
- Mechanome wikiPageWikiLink Myosin.
- Mechanome wikiPageWikiLink Omics.
- Mechanome wikiPageWikiLink Optical_trap.
- Mechanome wikiPageWikiLink Optical_tweezers.
- Mechanome wikiPageWikiLink Proteome.
- Mechanome wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mechanome".
- Mechanome hasPhotoCollection Mechanome.
- Mechanome wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Note.
- Mechanome wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Ref.
- Mechanome subject Category:Biomechanics.
- Mechanome type Biophysic.
- Mechanome type Mechanic.
- Mechanome comment "The mechanome consists of the body, or ome, of data including cell and molecular processes relating to force and mechanical systems at molecular, cellular and tissue length scales, i.e. the fundamental "machine code" structures of the cell. The mechanome encompasses biological motors, like kinesin, myosin, RNAP, and Ribosome mechanical structures, like actin or the cytoskeleton, or processes, such as cytokinesis or chemotaxis.".
- Mechanome label "Mechanome".
- Mechanome sameAs m.0ffgk2.
- Mechanome sameAs Q6804684.
- Mechanome sameAs Q6804684.
- Mechanome wasDerivedFrom Mechanome?oldid=552426381.
- Mechanome isPrimaryTopicOf Mechanome.