09:00 - 09:40
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Jens-Uwe Sommer
(Leibniz-Institut für Polymerforschung Dresden e.V.)
Chemotaxis of active Brownian chains: leveraging constraints for advantage
Chemotaxis of Active Brownian Chains: Leveraging Constraints for Advantage.
Jens-Uwe Sommer, Hidde Vujik, Holger Merlitz, Pietro Luigi Muzzeddu and Abinav Sharma
We investigated the dynamics of active Brownian particles in gradients of activity using both theory and simulations. Traditionally, it was believed that single active particles move down the gradient of activity, akin to passive particles in a temperature gradient, thus requiring some level of information processing for chemotaxis, as seen in living organisms. However, we demonstrated that connecting active particles into larger structures, such as active chains, is sufficient to induce chemotaxis in the stationary state. This behavior arises from the back-storing effect of connectivity, which compels active particles to explore the local environment rather than engage in free random motion. Consequently, stationary chemotaxis is observed even when active particles are connected to a passive cargo. We discuss the mechanism of stationary chemotaxis and present analytic solutions for various scenarios, including active-passive dimers, active chains, and rigid active dimers. Specifically, we can identify an order parameter for chemotaxis that depends solely on the connectivity of the active particles and the persistence of active motion.
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09:40 - 10:00
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Zuyao Xiao
(Technische Universität Dresden)
Investigating chemotaxis in active colloids through microfluidic techniques
Chemotaxis, the directed movement of organisms or cells in response to chemical gradients, is a fundamental process that influences the behavior of active matter in diverse environments. This has attracted wide attention in replicating and controlling artificial chemotaxis in laboratory settings.
In this study, we have used a microfluidic system to investigate the chemotactic behavior of active Janus colloids, which can address the limitations of previous approaches by excluding the influence of a flowing medium. By employing the stop-flow technique, we can establish a controlled chemical gradient in a static environment, thereby enabling us to observe and quantify behaviors of active colloids in this gradient without any interference from surrounding flow turbulence.
Our findings demonstrate that these active Janus colloids exhibit distinct chemotactic behavior, which is influenced by their driving mechanism and surface properties. This can result in particles displaying either positive or negative chemotaxis, or more complex motion patterns within the chemical gradient. This study not only highlights the advantages of microfluidic techniques in understanding the chemotactic mechanisms of active colloids but also has important implications for understanding the behavior of the behavior of living soft matter in natural environments.
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10:00 - 10:20
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Ricard Alert
(Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems)
Frictiotaxis: A new tactic behavior
Cells migrate along gradients of substrate stiffness — a process called durotaxis. The physical explanation for durotaxis relies on focal adhesions transmitting the cell’s contractile forces to the substrate. Combining experiments and theory, I will show that confined cells can perform durotaxis despite lacking strong or specific adhesions. We show that the mechanism of this adhesion-independent durotaxis is based on the fact that stiffer substrate offers higher friction. We develop a physical model that predicts that non-adherent cells polarize and migrate towards higher friction — a tactic behavior that we call frictiotaxis. We demonstrate frictiotaxis in experiments by showing that cells migrate up a friction gradient even when stiffness is uniform. These results broaden the potential of durotaxis to guide any cell that contacts a substrate. Our work also reveals a new mode of directed migration based on friction, with implications for immune and cancer cells, which commonly move with non-specific interactions.
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10:20 - 11:00
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coffee break & discussion
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11:00 - 11:40
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Benjamin Friedrich
(Technische Universität Dresden)
Gradient-sensing in space and time
To perform chemotaxis, biological cells use one of two fundamental gradient-sensing strategies: spatial comparison of concentrations measured at different positions on their surface, or temporal comparison of concentrations measured at different locations visited along their motion path. It is believed that size and speed dictate which gradient-sensing strategy cells choose, yet a formal proof is pending.
We introduce a model of an ideal chemotactic agent with unlimited information processing capabilities that combines spatial and temporal comparison. We account for physical limits of chemo-sensation: molecule counting noise at physiological concentrations, and motility noise inevitable at the micro-scale. The agent continuously updates an egocentric likelihood map of relative target position.
An analytic theory for this egotaxis agent allows to decompose information gain into contribution from spatial and temporal comparison [1]. Extensive simulation data collapses onto an empirical power-law that predicts an optimal weighting of information as function of motility and sensing noise, demonstrating how spatial comparison becomes more beneficial for agents that are large, slow and less persistent.
Our idealized model assuming unlimited information processing capabilities can serve as a benchmark for the chemotaxis of biological cells, and thus to refine heuristic notions on the evolutionary choice of gradient-sensing strategies.
[1] Auconi et al. EPL (2023); https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.10.14.562229v1
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11:40 - 12:00
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Asma Braham
(ENS de Lyon)
Bacteria chemotactic motion in a microfluidic channel in the presence of cationic gradients
Flagellar swimming allows bacteria to travel long distances. When a mobile bacterium approaches a surface, hydrodynamic interactions cause its trajectory to become circular. However, the bacterium's path is marked by periodic reorientations and pauses resulting from changes in the rotational direction of the flagellar bundle. This directional shift occurs at regular intervals, approximately every second, lasting about 100 milliseconds in the case of the bacterium E. coli. These sporadic reorientations enable bacteria to enhance their effective diffusion near surfaces, facilitating environmental exploration.
Bacterial chemotaxis takes advantage of a frequency bias in reorientation, allowing the redistribution of bacterial populations to evade toxic environments and move towards favorable regions. Our research focuses on the impact of known chemorepellent substances, such as Ni2+ cations, on bacterial redistribution. Experimental investigations into bacterial motility under varied chemical conditions in microfluidic channels are carried out using dark-field video microscopy.
The chemorepulsive diffusion profile of Ni2+ and other cations generates an asymmetric wave. Notably, individual bacteria exhibit a biased motion aligned with the direction of the wave's propagation. The surface behavior of the wave differs from its bulk counterpart. A minimal model, integrating Ni2+ diffusion and chemotactically enhanced bacterial displacement, successfully replicates the asymmetrical shape of the wave and its average speed. The colonization pattern is marked by collective movement in large groups within the bulk and scattering at the surface.
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12:00 - 12:20
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Robert Großmann
(Universität Potsdam)
Bacterial navigation and chemotaxis in complex environments
Understanding the fundamental principles governing bacterial motility and navigation is crucial for comprehending critical phenomena, such as infectious disease transmission and biofilm formation. For swimming bacteria, efficient navigation through complex environments, such as structured soil, poses a significant challenge. In this presentation, we will delve into the intricate correlation between the micro-scale navigation of bacteria and their large-scale movement in diverse and heterogeneous environments.
We combine experiments, using the soil bacterium *Pseudomonas putida* as a model organism, and active particle modeling. Specifically, we examine how the disordered environment (agar) guides the migration patterns of these bacteria, leading to remarkable motility characteristics. Our research reveals transient subdiffusion of bacteria in agar, primarily due to intermittent trapping. These findings highlight a dynamic hop-and-trap mechanism, with trap times following a power-law distribution.
In contrast to the well-studied case of bacterial chemotaxis in uniform bulk fluid, relying mainly on the modulation of run times in dependence of the direction of motion, we provide evidence that the soil bacterium *Pseudomonas putida* also performs chemotaxis in a porous medium where the free path length is severely restricted. The importance of the run time bias as a chemotaxis mechanism decreases for higher agar concentrations. However, we identified a second chemotaxis strategy: the change in direction of motion of bacteria is adjusted after a run, so that the next run phase leads in the direction of the chemotactic gradient (tumble bias).
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12:20 - 13:30
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lunch
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13:30 - 14:10
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Ramin Golestanian
(Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization)
Non-reciprocal chemotaxis
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14:10 - 14:30
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Devi Prasad Panigrahi
(University College London)
Self-organization in a multicellular aggregate of Dictyostelium undergoing chemotaxis (virtual)
In this work, we study the emergent dynamics of multicellular aggregates of Dictystelium discoideum undergoing chemotaxis, using an Agent-based modelling approach. In experiments performed by our collaborators, it has been observed that the self-organization of these aggregates resembles active fluids as the population exhibits surface tension, viscosity and bulk diffusion, as it migrates in response to a self-generated chemical gradient. The aim of the present research is to identify and quantify how individual cellular behaviour can give rise to these emergent properties at the population scale.
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14:30 - 14:50
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John Mackenzie
(University of Strathclyde)
Approximate Bayesian computation parameter estimation for a model of self-generated cell chemotaxis
Approximate Bayesian computation (ABC) has gained considerable interest in recent years as it allows for approximate inference for models with intractable or expensive to calculate likelihoods. ABC replaces the likelihood computation by simulating from the underlying generative model and using the parameters corresponding to the generated observations which are ``close enough'' to the true data to approximate the posterior distribution. Due to the abundance of existing ABC methods, selecting the best one for a given problem can be a challenging task. In this talk we present some results of the use of an ABC algorithm to perform parameter estimation for a complex model of collective cell migration. We consider a hybrid discrete-continuum model for the migration of a population of cells which interact with a background chemical chemoattractant field. Each individual cell acts a moving sink term reflecting the degradation of the chemoattractant through the action of membrane bound enzymes. We perform a sensitivity analysis of the model using a Morris screening approach to give an idea about which parameters in the model are identifiable. We show that the time scale over which measurements are made is key to the reliability of ABC approach for parameter inference. Our results suggest that regardless of the algorithm used, the ABC-posterior distributions depend crucially on the value of the measurement time interval $T$ and that capturing the true parameter uncertainty of the SDE model parameters might be a challenging task for ABC.
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14:50 - 15:30
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group photo (to be published on the workshop website) & coffee break & discussion
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15:30 - 15:50
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Subhadip Ghosh
(Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia)
Enzyme-powered lipid-polymer hybrid vesicles
The self-propelled, synthetic active matter that transduces chemical energy into mechanical motion are examples of non-equilibrium systems with diverse applications in nanomachinery, fluidics, sensing, and transport. In this context, enzyme-powered propulsion is a classic model where the catalytic reaction has been utilized either by encapsulating enzymes within nanocarriers or tethering them to the vehicle chassis.1,2 In a recent study, we have shown phospholipid vesicles, when tagged with different enzymes, displayed motile behaviour and chemotaxis owing to catalytic conversion of the corresponding substrate solution.3,4 Interestingly, from these results, it was concluded that liposomes when engineered optimally with surface-bound cues could adapt and reconfigure their directional motion in response to interactions with bulk solute molecules. Although liposomes-based drug delivery has gained considerable attention owing to their success in recent RNA-based vaccines, but they need to be rationally designed to evade the formation of ‘protein corona’ to effectively protect cargoes from degradation and deliver them in a targeted and specific way.5 In this context, polymeric nanostructures such as vesicles and micelles comprising of amphiphilic copolymers have been a topic of burgeoning research interest due to their strong repulsive steric potential that can prevent protein fouling and other nonspecific interactions.6 Extensive studies from our group have successfully proved that such polymeric vesicles do not adsorb when incubated with different serum proteins and are highly stable in complex physiological environments. Combining the intriguing results from our lipid and polymer vesicle-based studies, in the ongoing work we aimed to prepare lipid-polymer hybrid vesicles having multifaceted versatility; biocompatibility coming from the lipid segment and chemical robustness from the polymer fraction. By rationally engineering the surface with active cues, we are trying to achieve directional motility and selectivity of the hybrid protocells, and use them as targeted delivery platforms. We anticipate our results to constitute the first steps in fabricating multifunctional motors for carrying out specific functions under physiological conditions.
References
1. A. Joseph, G. Battaglia et al. Sci. Adv. 2017, 3, e1700362.
2. S. Ghosh et al. Ann. Rev. Conden. Matter Phys. 2021, 12, 177.
3. S. Ghosh et al. Nano Lett. 2019, 19, 6019.
4. A. Somasundar, S. Ghosh et al. Nature Nanotech. 2019, 14, 1129.
5. S. Wilhelm et al. Nat. Rev. Mater. 2016, 1, 16014.
6. X. Tian et al. Sci. Adv. 2020, 6, eaat0919.
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15:50 - 16:10
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round table discussion
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16:10 - 16:50
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Hans Othmer
(University of Minnesota)
From signaling to movement - mathematical and computational problems in signaling and mechanics in cell motility (virtual)
Cell locomotion is essential for early development, the immune response, and wound healing in multicellular organisms, and plays a very deleterious role in cancer metastasis in humans. Locomotion involves the detection and transduction of extracellular chemical and mechanical signals,integration of the signals into an intracellular signal,and the spatio-temporal control of the intracellular biochemical and mechanical responses that lead to force generation, morphological changes and directed movement. We will discuss some of the mathematical and computational challenges that the integration of these processes poses and describe recent progress on some component processes.
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16:50 - 18:00
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poster & discussion
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18:00 - 19:00
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dinner
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19:00 - 20:00
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chemt24 public evening lecture
Christina Roggatz (Universität Bremen)
Der Unsichtbare Ruf der Moleküle: Chemische Kommunikation und Chemotaxis im Ozean der Zukunft
Lebewesen im Ozean vom Bakterium bis zum Hai nutzen eine Vielzahl unterschiedlicher Geruchsmoleküle zur Koordination des täglichen Zusammenlebens. Futter, potenzielle Partner, eventuelle Konkurrenten, gefährliche Räuber oder der eigene Nachwuchs werden zumeist "erschnüffelt". Doch diese chemische Sprache des Zusammenlebens ist durch Umweltveränderungen im Kontext des Klimawandels beeinflusst. Dieser Vortrag begleitet Krabben auf der Suche nach ihrem Mittagssnack und beim Eier hüten, zeigt wie Verteidigung und Liebesgeschichten bei Kugelfischen eng verknüpft sind, und taucht in das WG-Leben von Biofilmen aus Mikroalgen und Bakterien ein – immer mit Blick auf das sich ändernde chemische Zusammenspiel im wärmeren und saureren Ozean der Zukunft.
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20:00 - 21:00
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discussion
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