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Cellular sensing governs the stability of chemotactic fronts

ORAL

Abstract

In contexts ranging from embryonic development to bacterial ecology, cell populations migrate chemotactically along self-generated chemical gradients, often forming a propagating front. I will theoretically show that the stability of such chemotactic fronts to morphological perturbations is determined by limitations in the ability of individual cells to sense and respond to the chemical gradient. Specifically, I will argue that cells at bulging parts of a front are exposed to a smaller gradient, which slows them down and promotes stability, but they also respond more strongly to the gradient, which speeds them up and promotes instability. We predict that this competition leads to chemotactic fingering when sensing is limited at too low chemical concentrations. Guided by this finding and by experimental data on E. coli chemotaxis, we suggest that the cells' sensory machinery might have evolved to avoid these limitations and ensure stable front propagation. Finally, as sensing of any stimuli is necessarily limited, the principle of sensing-induced stability may operate in other types of directed migration such as durotaxis, electrotaxis, and phototaxis.

Publication: http://arxiv.org/abs/2107.11702

Presenters

  • Ricard Alert

    Max Planck Institute for the Physics of, Max Planck Institute for the physics of complex systems

Authors

  • Ricard Alert

    Max Planck Institute for the Physics of, Max Planck Institute for the physics of complex systems

  • Sujit S Datta

    Princeton University, Princeton