Crowding-induced anisotropic transport modulates reaction kinetics in nanoscale porous media

J Phys Chem B. 2010 Apr 29;114(16):5380-5. doi: 10.1021/jp9025865.

Abstract

We quantify the emergence of persistent anisotropy in the diffusion of spherical tracer particles through a nanoscale porous medium composed of a uniform distribution of purely symmetric crowding particles. We focus on the interior of a biological cell as an example of such a medium and find that diffusion is highly directional for distances comparable to the size of some organelles. We use a geometrical procedure that avoids the standard orientational averaging to quantify the anisotropy of diffusive paths and show that the point source distributions are predominantly of prolate ellipsoidal shape as a result of local volume exclusion. This geometrical symmetry breaking strongly skews the distribution of kinetic rates of diffusion-limited reactions toward small values, leading to the result that, for short to intermediate times, almost 80% of the rates measured in an ensemble of heterogeneous media are smaller than the expected rate in an ideal homogeneous medium of similar excluded volume fraction. This crowding-induced modulation may have implications for our understanding and measurement of diffusion-controlled intracellular reaction kinetics and for experimental nanotechnology applications, such as nanoparticle-based bioimaging and drug delivery, where diffusion plays an important role.

MeSH terms

  • Anisotropy
  • Diffusion
  • Kinetics
  • Nanostructures / chemistry*
  • Porosity
  • Rotation