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Swimming Third Domain Archaeal

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Seminar✓ Recording AvailablePhysics of Life

Swimming in the third domain: archaeal extremophiles

Laurence Wilson

Dr

University of York

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Monday, August 17, 2020

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Tuesday, August 18, 2020

12:16 AM Europe/London

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Host: BioActive Fluids

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Abstract

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.

Topics

archaeaarchaellaarcheachemotaxiseubacteriaextremophilesflagellahalophilicholographythermodynamic limitthree-dimensional holographic microscopy

About the Speaker

Laurence Wilson

Dr

University of York

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

www.york.ac.uk/physics/people/lg_wilson/

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