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Membrane mechanics meet minimal manifolds
Changes in the geometry and topology of self-assembled membranes underlie diverse processes across cellular biology and engineering. Similar to lipid bilayers, monolayer colloidal membranes studied by the Sharma (IISc Bangalore) and Dogic (UCSB) Labs have in-plane fluid-like dynamics and out-of-plane bending elasticity, but their open edges and micron length scale provide a tractable system to study the equilibrium energetics and dynamic pathways of membrane assembly and reconfiguration. First, we discuss how doping colloidal membranes with short miscible rods transforms disk-shaped membranes into saddle-shaped minimal surfaces with complex edge structures. Theoretical modeling demonstrates that their formation is driven by increasing positive Gaussian modulus, which in turn is controlled by the fraction of short rods. Further coalescence of saddle-shaped surfaces leads to exotic topologically distinct structures, including shapes similar to catenoids, tri-noids, four-noids, and higher order structures. We then mathematically explore the mechanics of these catenoid-like structures subject to an external axial force and elucidate their intimate connection to two problems whose solutions date back to Euler: the shape of an area-minimizing soap film and the buckling of a slender rod under compression. A perturbation theory argument directly relates the tensions of membranes to the stability properties of minimal surfaces. We also investigate the effects of including a Gaussian curvature modulus, which, for small enough membranes, causes the axial force to diverge as the ring separation approaches its maximal value.
Emergence of homochirality in large molecular systems
The question of the origin of homochirality of living matter, or the dominance of one handedness for all molecules of life across the entire biosphere, is a long-standing puzzle in the research on the Origin of Life. In the fifties, Frank proposed a mechanism to explain homochirality based on the properties of a simple autocatalytic network containing only a few chemical species. Following this work, chemists struggled to find experimental realizations of this model, possibly due to a lack of proper methods to identify autocatalysis [1]. In any case, a model based on a few chemical species seems rather limited, because prebiotic earth is likely to have consisted of complex ‘soups’ of chemicals. To include this aspect of the problem, we recently proposed a mechanism based on certain features of large out-of-equilibrium chemical networks [2]. We showed that a phase transition towards an homochiral state is likely to occur as the number of chiral species in the system becomes large or as the amount of free energy injected into the system increases. Through an analysis of large chemical databases, we showed that there is no need for very large molecules for chiral species to dominate over achiral ones; it already happens when molecules contain about 10 heavy atoms. We also analyzed the various conventions used to measure chirality and discussed the relative chiral signs adopted by different groups of molecules [3]. We then proposed a generalization of Frank’s model for large chemical networks, which we characterized using random matrix theory. This analysis includes sparse networks, suggesting that the emergence of homochirality is a robust and generic transition. References: [1] A. Blokhuis, D. Lacoste, and P. Nghe, PNAS (2020), 117, 25230. [2] G. Laurent, D. Lacoste, and P. Gaspard, PNAS (2021) 118 (3) e2012741118. [3] G. Laurent, D. Lacoste, and P. Gaspard, Proc. R. Soc. A 478:20210590 (2022).
Better energies for low-dimensional elastic systems under combined bending and stretching
We present new kinematic bending measures and quadratic energies for isotropic elastic plates and shells, with certain desirable features not present in commonly employed models in mechanics and soft matter. These are justified both by simple physical arguments related to the through-thickness variation in strain, and through a detailed reduction from a three-dimensional energy quadratic in stretch. The measure of plate bending is a dilation-invariant surface tensor that couples stretch and curvature in a natural extension of primitive generalized bending strains for straight rods. The extension to naturally-curved rods and shells, for which the pure stretching of a curved rest configuration is not a dilation, contrasts with previous ad hoc postulated forms. Our results provide a clean basis for simple models of low-dimensional elastic systems, and should enable more accurate probing of the structure of singularities in soft sheets and membranes.
Nonequilibrium self-assembly and time-irreversibility in living systems
Far-from-equilibrium processes constantly dissipate energy while converting a free-energy source to another form of energy. Living systems, for example, rely on an orchestra of molecular motors that consume chemical fuel to produce mechanical work. In this talk, I will describe two features of life, namely, time-irreversibility, and nonequilibrium self-assembly. Time irreversibility is the hallmark of nonequilibrium dissipative processes. Detecting dissipation is essential for our basic understanding of the underlying physical mechanism, however, it remains a challenge in the absence of observable directed motion, flows, or fluxes. Additional difficulty arises in complex systems where many internal degrees of freedom are inaccessible to an external observer. I will introduce a novel approach to detect time irreversibility and estimate the entropy production from time-series measurements, even in the absence of observable currents. This method can be implemented in scenarios where only partial information is available and thus provides a new tool for studying nonequilibrium phenomena. Further, I will explore the added benefits achieved by nonequilibrium driving for self-assembly, identify distinctive collective phenomena that emerge in a nonequilibrium self-assembly setting, and demonstrate the interplay between the assembly speed, kinetic stability, and relative population of dynamical attractors.
Trapping active particles up to the limiting case: bacteria enclosed in a biofilm
Active matter systems are composed of constituents, each one in nonequilibrium, that consume energy in order to move [1]. A characteristic feature of active matter is collective motion leading to nonequilibrium phase transitions or large scale directed motion [2]. A number of recent works have featured active particles interacting with obstacles, either moving or fixed [3,4,5]. When an active particle encounters an asymmetric obstacle, different behaviours are detected depending on the nature of its active motion. On the one side, rectification effects arise in a suspension of run-and-tumble particles interacting with a wall of funnelled-shaped openings, caused by particles persistence length [6]. The same trapping mechanism could be responsible for the intake of microorganisms in the underground leaves [7] of Carnivorous plants [8]. On the other side, for aligning particles [9] interacting with a wall of funnelled-shaped openings, trapping happens on the (opposite) wider opening side of the funnels [10,11]. Interestingly, when funnels are located on a circular array, trapping is more localised and depends on the nature of the Vicsek model. Active particles can be synthetic (such as synthetic active colloids) or alive (such as living bacteria). A prototypical model to study living microswimmers is P. fluorescens, a rod shaped and biofilm forming bacterium. Biofilms are microbial communities self-assembled onto external interfaces. Biofilms can be described within the Soft Matter physics framework [12] as a viscoelastic material consisting of colloids (bacterial cells) embedded in a cross-linked polymer gel (polysaccharides cross-linked via proteins/multivalent cations), whose water content vary depending on the environmental conditions. Bacteria embedded in the polymeric matrix control biofilm structure and mechanical properties by regulating its matrix composition. We have recently monitored structural features of Pseudomonas fluorescens biofilms grown with and without hydrodynamic stress [13,14]. We have demonstrated that bacteria are capable of self-adapting to hostile hydrodynamic stress by tailoring the biofilm chemical composition, thus affecting both the mesoscale structure of the matrix and its viscoelastic properties that ultimately regulate the bacteria-polymer interactions. REFERENCES [1] C. Bechinger et al. Rev. Mod. Phys. 88, 045006 (2016); [2] T. Vicsek, A. Zafeiris Phys. Rep. 517, 71 (2012); [3] C. Bechinger, R. Di Leonardo, H. Lowen, C. Reichhardt, G. Volpe, and G. Volpe, Reviews of Modern Physics 88, 045006 (2016); [4] R Martinez, F Alarcon, DR Rodriguez, JL Aragones, C Valeriani The European Physical Journal E 41, 1 (2018); [5] DR Rodriguez, F Alarcon, R Martinez, J Ramírez, C Valeriani, Soft matter 16 (5), 1162 (2020); [6] C. O. Reichhardt and C. Reichhardt, Annual Review of Condensed Matter Physics 8, 51 (2017); [7] W Barthlott, S Porembski, E Fischer, B Gemmel Nature 392, 447 (1998); [8] C B. Giuliano, R Zhang, R.Martinez Fernandez, C.Valeriani and L.Wilson (in preparation, 2021); [9] R Martinez, F Alarcon, JL Aragones, C Valeriani Soft matter 16 (20), 4739 (2020); [10] P. Galajada, J. Keymer, P. Chaikin and R.Austin, Journal of bacteriology, 189, 8704 (2007); [11] M. Wan, C.O. Reichhardt, Z. Nussinov, and C. Reichhardt, Physical Review Letters 101, 018102 (2008); [12] J N. Wilking , T E. Angelini , A Seminara , M P. Brenner , and D A. Weitz MRS Bulletin 36, 385 (2011); [13]J Jara, F Alarcón, A K Monnappa, J Ignacio Santos, V Bianco, P Nie, M Pica Ciamarra, A Canales, L Dinis, I López-Montero, C Valeriani, B Orgaz, Frontiers in microbiology 11, 3460 (2021); [14] P Nie, F Alarcon, I López-Montero, B Orgaz, C Valeriani, M Pica Ciamarra
Energy landscapes, order and disorder, and protein sequence coevolution: From proteins to chromosome structure
In vivo, the human genome folds into a characteristic ensemble of 3D structures. The mechanism driving the folding process remains unknown. A theoretical model for chromatin (the minimal chromatin model) explains the folding of interphase chromosomes and generates chromosome conformations consistent with experimental data is presented. The energy landscape of the model was derived by using the maximum entropy principle and relies on two experimentally derived inputs: a classification of loci into chromatin types and a catalog of the positions of chromatin loops. This model was generalized by utilizing a neural network to infer these chromatin types using epigenetic marks present at a locus, as assayed by ChIP-Seq. The ensemble of structures resulting from these simulations completely agree with HI-C data and exhibits unknotted chromosomes, phase separation of chromatin types, and a tendency for open chromatin to lie at the periphery of chromosome territories. Although this theoretical methodology was trained in one cell line, the human GM12878 lymphoblastoid cells, it has successfully predicted the structural ensembles of multiple human cell lines. Finally, going beyond Hi-C, our predicted structures are also consistent with microscopy measurements. Analysis of both structures from simulation and microscopy reveals that short segments of chromatin make two-state transitions between closed conformations and open dumbbell conformations. For gene active segments, the vast majority of genes appear clustered in the linker region of the chromatin segment, allowing us to speculate possible mechanisms by which chromatin structure and dynamics may be involved in controlling gene expression. * Supported by the NSF
Microorganism locomotion in viscoelastic fluids
Many microorganisms and cells function in complex (non-Newtonian) fluids, which are mixtures of different materials and exhibit both viscous and elastic stresses. For example, mammalian sperm swim through cervical mucus on their journey through the female reproductive tract, and they must penetrate the viscoelastic gel outside the ovum to fertilize. In micro-scale swimming the dynamics emerge from the coupled interactions between the complex rheology of the surrounding media and the passive and active body dynamics of the swimmer. We use computational models of swimmers in viscoelastic fluids to investigate and provide mechanistic explanations for emergent swimming behaviors. I will discuss how flexible filaments (such as flagella) can store energy from a viscoelastic fluid to gain stroke boosts due to fluid elasticity. I will also describe 3D simulations of model organisms such as C. Reinhardtii and mammalian sperm, where we use experimentally measured stroke data to separate naturally coupled stroke and fluid effects. We explore why strokes that are adapted to Newtonian fluid environments might not do well in viscoelastic environments.
Inertial active soft matter
Active particles which are self-propelled by converting energy into mechanical motion represent an expanding research realm in physics and chemistry. For micron-sized particles moving in a liquid (``microswimmers''), most of the basic features have been described by using the model of overdamped active Brownian motion [1]. However, for macroscopic particles or microparticles moving in a gas, inertial effects become relevant such that the dynamics is underdamped. Therefore, recently, active particles with inertia have been described by extending the active Brownian motion model to active Langevin dynamics which include inertia [2]. In this talk, recent developments of active particles with inertia (``microflyers'', ``hoppers'' or ``runners'') are summarized including: inertial delay effects between particle velocity and self-propulsion direction [3], tuning of the long-time self-diffusion by the moment of inertia [3], the influence of inertia on motility-induced phase separation and the cluster growth exponent [4], and the formation of active micelles (“rotelles”) by using inertial active surfactants. References [1] C. Bechinger, R. di Leonardo, H. Löwen, C. Reichhardt, G. Volpe, G. Volpe, Reviews of Modern Physics 88, 045006 (2016). [2] H. Löwen, Journal of Chemical Physics 152, 040901 (2020). [3] C. Scholz, S. Jahanshahi, A. Ldov, H. Löwen, Nature Communications 9, 5156 (2018). [4] S. Mandal, B. Liebchen, H. Löwen, Physical Review Letters 123, 228001 (2019). [5] C. Scholz, A. Ldov, T. Pöschel, M. Engel, H. Löwen, Surfactants and rotelles in active chiral fluids, will be published
Bend, slip, or break?
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.
Non-equilibrium molecular assembly in reshaping and cutting cells
A key challenge in modern soft matter is to identify the principles that govern the organisation and functionality in non-equilibrium systems. Current research efforts largely focus on non-equilibrium processes that occur either at the single-molecule scale (e.g. protein and DNA conformations under driving forces), or at the scale of whole tissues, organisms, and active colloidal and microscopic objects. However, the range of the scales in-between — from molecules to large-scaled molecular assemblies that consume energy and perform work — remains under-explored. This is, nevertheless, the scale that is crucial for the function of a living cell, where molecular self-assembly driven far from equilibrium produces mechanical work needed for cell reshaping, transport, motility, division, and healing. Today I will discuss physical modelling of active elastic filaments, called ESCRT-III filaments, that dynamically assemble and disassemble on cell membranes. This dynamic assembly changes the filaments’ shape and mechanical properties and leads to the remodelling and cutting of cells. I will present a range of experimental comparisons of our simulation results: from ESCRT-III-driven trafficking in eukaryotes to division of evolutionary simple archaeal cells.
Building a synthetic cell: Understanding the clock design and function
Clock networks containing the same central architectures may vary drastically in their potential to oscillate, raising the question of what controls robustness, one of the essential functions of an oscillator. We computationally generate an atlas of oscillators and found that, while core topologies are critical for oscillations, local structures substantially modulate the degree of robustness. Strikingly, two local structures, incoherent and coherent inputs, can modify a core topology to promote and attenuate its robustness, additively. The findings underscore the importance of local modifications to the performance of the whole network. It may explain why auxiliary structures not required for oscillations are evolutionary conserved. We also extend this computational framework to search hidden network motifs for other clock functions, such as tunability that relates to the capabilities of a clock to adjust timing to external cues. Experimentally, we developed an artificial cell system in water-in-oil microemulsions, within which we reconstitute mitotic cell cycles that can perform self-sustained oscillations for 30 to 40 cycles over multiple days. The oscillation profiles, such as period, amplitude, and shape, can be quantitatively varied with the concentrations of clock regulators, energy levels, droplet sizes, and circuit design. Such innate flexibility makes it crucial to studying clock functions of tunability and stochasticity at the single-cell level. Combined with a pressure-driven multi-channel tuning setup and long-term time-lapse fluorescence microscopy, this system enables a high-throughput exploration in multi-dimension continuous parameter space and single-cell analysis of the clock dynamics and functions. We integrate this experimental platform with mathematical modeling to elucidate the topology-function relation of biological clocks. With FRET and optogenetics, we also investigate spatiotemporal cell-cycle dynamics in both homogeneous and heterogeneous microenvironments by reconstructing subcellular compartments.
Adhering, wrapping, and bursting of lipid bilayer membranes: understanding effects of membrane-binding particles and polymers
Proteins and membranes form remarkably complex structures that are key to intracellular compartmentalization, cargo transport, and cell morphology. Despite this wealth of examples in living systems, we still lack design principles for controlling membrane morphology in synthetic systems. With experiments and simulations, we show that even the simple case of spherical or rod-shaped nanoparticles binding to lipid-bilayer membrane vesicles results in a remarkably rich set of morphologies that can be reliably controlled via the particle binding energy. When the binding energy is weak relative to a characteristic membrane-bending energy, vesicles adhere to one another and form a soft solid gel, which is a useful platform for controlled release. With larger binding energy, a transition from partial to complete wrapping of the nanoparticles causes a remarkable vesicle destruction process culminating in rupture, nanoparticle-membrane tubules, and vesicle inversion. We have explored the behavior across a wide range of parameter space. These findings help unify the wide range of effects observed when vesicles or cells are exposed to nanoparticles. They also show how they open the door to a new class of vesicle-based, closed-cell gels that are more than 99% water and can encapsulate and release on demand. I will discuss how triggering membrane remodeling could lead to shape-responsive systems in the future.
“Unraveling Protein's Structural Dynamics: from Configurational Dynamics to Ensemble Switching Guides Functional Mesoscale Assemblies”
Evidence regarding protein structure and function manifest the imperative role that dynamics play in proteins, underlining reconsideration of the unanimated sequence-to-structure-to-function paradigm. Structural dynamics portray a heterogeneous energy landscape described by conformational ensembles where each structural representation can be responsible for unique functions or enable macromolecular assemblies. Using the human p27/Cdk2/Cyclin A ternary complex as an example, we highlight the vital role of intra- and intermolecular dynamics for target recognition, binding, and inhibition as a critical modulator of cell division. Rapidly sampling configurations is critical for the population of different conformational ensembles encoding functional roles. To garner this knowledge, we present how the integration of (sub)ensemble and single-molecule fluorescence spectroscopy with molecular dynamic simulations can characterize structural dynamics linking the heterogeneous ensembles to function. The incorporation of dynamics into the sequence-to-structure-to-function paradigm promises to assist in tackling various challenges, including understanding the formation and regulation of mesoscale assemblies inside cells.
Spontaneous and driven active matter flows
Understanding individual and macroscopic transport properties of motile micro-organisms in complex environments is a timely question, relevant to many ecological, medical and technological situations. At the fundamental level, this question is also receiving a lot of attention as fluids loaded with swimming micro-organisms has become a rich domain of applications and a conceptual playground for the statistical physics of “active matter”. The existence of microscopic sources of energy borne by the motile character of these micro-swimmers is driving self-organization processes at the origin of original emergent phases and unconventional macroscopic properties leading to revisit many standard concepts in the physics of suspensions. In this presentation, I will report on a recent exploration on the question of spontaneous formation of large scale collective motion in relation with the rheological response of active suspensions. I will also present new experiments showing how the motility of bacteria can be controlled such as to extract work macroscopically.
Swimming in the third domain: archaeal extremophiles
Archaea have evolved to survive in some of the most extreme environments on earth. Life in extreme, nutrient-poor conditions gives the opportunity to probe fundamental energy limitations on movement and response to stimuli, two essential markers of living systems. Here we use three-dimensional holographic microscopy and computer simulations to show that halophilic archaea achieve chemotaxis with power requirements one hundred-fold lower than common eubacterial model systems. Their swimming direction is stabilised by their flagella (archaella), enhancing directional persistence in a manner similar to that displayed by eubacteria, albeit with a different motility apparatus. Our experiments and simulations reveal that the cells are capable of slow but deterministic chemotaxis up a chemical gradient, in a biased random walk at the thermodynamic limit.
Following the energy in cellular information processing
energy coverage
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