Excitable mechanics embodied in a walking cilium
ORAL
Abstract
Rapid transduction of sensory stimulation to action is essential for an animal to survive. To this end, most animals use the sub-second excitable and multistable dynamics of a neuromuscular system. Here, studying an animal without neurons or muscles, we report analogous excitable and multistable dynamics embedded in the physics of a 'walking' cilium. We begin by showing that cilia can walk without specialized gait control and identify the characteristic scales of spatio-temporal height fluctuations of the tissue. With the addition of surface interaction, we construct a low-order dynamical model of this single-cilium sub-unit. En route to an emergent model for ciliary walking, we demonstrate the limits of substrate mediated synchronization between cilia. In the desynchronized limit, our model shows evidence of a multi-stability mediated by the crosstalk between locomotive forcing and height. The out-of-equilibrium mechanics directly control the locomotive forcing of a walking cilia bypassing the role of the synaptic junctions between neurons and muscles. We show a minimal mechanism -- trigger waves -- by which these walking cells may work together to achieve organism-scale collaboration, such as coordination of hunting strikes across 105 cells without central control.
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Publication: arXiv:2107.02930
Presenters
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Matthew S Bull
Stanford University
Authors
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Matthew S Bull
Stanford University
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Laurel A. A Kroo
Stanford University
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Manu Prakash
Stanford University