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SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

4D Chromosome Organization: Combining Polymer Physics, Knot Theory and High Performance Computing

Anna Lappala
Harvard University
Mar 7, 2022

Self-organization is a universal concept spanning numerous disciplines including mathematics, physics and biology. Chromosomes are self-organizing polymers that fold into orderly, hierarchical and yet dynamic structures. In the past decade, advances in experimental biology have provided a means to reveal information about chromosome connectivity, allowing us to directly use this information from experiments to generate 3D models of individual genes, chromosomes and even genomes. In this talk I will present a novel data-driven modeling approach and discuss a number of possibilities that this method holds. I will discuss a detailed study of the time-evolution of X chromosome inactivation, highlighting both global and local properties of chromosomes that result in topology-driven dynamical arrest and present and characterize a novel type of motion we discovered in knots that may have applications to nanoscale materials and machines.

SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Tissue fluidization at the onset of zebrafish gastrulation

Carl-Philipp Heisenberg
IST Austria
Mar 31, 2021

Embryo morphogenesis is impacted by dynamic changes in tissue material properties, which have been proposed to occur via processes akin phase transitions (PTs). Here, we show that rigidity percolation provides a simple and robust theoretical framework to predict material/structural PTs of embryonic tissues from local cell connectivity. By using percolation theory, combined with directly monitoring dynamic changes in tissue rheology and cell contact mechanics, we demonstrate that the zebrafish blastoderm undergoes a genuine rigidity PT, brought about by a small reduction in adhesion-dependent cell connectivity below a critical value. We quantitatively predict and experimentally verify hallmarks of PTs, including power-law exponents and associated discontinuities of macroscopic observables at criticality. Finally, we show that this uniform PT depends on blastoderm cells undergoing meta-synchronous divisions causing random and, consequently, uniform changes in cell connectivity. Collectively, our theoretical and experimental findings reveal the structural basis of material PTs in an organismal context.

SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

Bend, slip, or break?

Karen Daniels
NC State University
Mar 3, 2021

Rigidity is the ability of a system to resist imposed stresses before ultimately undergoing failure. However, disordered materials often contain both rigid and floppy subregions that complicate the utility of taking system-wide averages. I will talk about 3 frameworks capable of connecting the internal structure of disordered materials to their rigidity and/or failure under loading, and describe how my collaborators and I have applied these frameworks to laboratory data on laser-cut lattices and idealized granular materials. These are, in order of increasing physics content: (1) centrality within an adjacency matrix describing its connectivity, (2) Maxwell constraint counting on the full network of frictional contact forces, and (3) the vibrational modes of a synthetic dynamical matrix (Hessian). The first two rely primarily on topology, and the second two contrast the utility of considering interparticle forces (Coulomb failure) vs. the energy landscape. All three methods, while successfully elucidating the origins of rigidity and brittle vs. ductile failure, also provide interesting counterpoints regarding how much information is enough to make predictions.

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