Loading…
Amoeboid swimming in a channel
Several micro-organisms, such as bacteria, algae, or spermatozoa, use flagellar or ciliary activity to swim in a fluid, while many other micro-organisms instead use ample shape deformation, described as amoeboid , to propel themselves either by crawling on a substrate or swimming. Many eukaryotic ce...
Saved in:
Published in: | Soft matter 2016-09, Vol.12 (36), p.747-7484 |
---|---|
Main Authors: | , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Summary: | Several micro-organisms, such as bacteria, algae, or spermatozoa, use flagellar or ciliary activity to swim in a fluid, while many other micro-organisms instead use ample shape deformation, described as
amoeboid
, to propel themselves either by crawling on a substrate or swimming. Many eukaryotic cells were believed to require an underlying substratum to migrate (crawl) by using membrane deformation (like blebbing or generation of lamellipodia) but there is now increasing evidence that a large variety of cells (including those of the immune system) can migrate without the assistance of focal adhesion, allowing them to swim as efficiently as they can crawl. This paper details the analysis of amoeboid swimming in a confined fluid by modeling the swimmer as an inextensible membrane deploying local active forces (with zero total force and torque). The swimmer displays a rich behavior: it may settle into a straight trajectory in the channel or navigate from one wall to the other depending on its confinement. The nature of the swimmer is also found to be affected by confinement: the swimmer can behave, on average over one swimming cycle, as a pusher at low confinement, and becomes a puller at higher confinement, or
vice versa
. The swimmer's nature is thus not an intrinsic property. The scaling of the swimmer velocity
V
with the force amplitude
A
is analyzed in detail showing that at small enough
A
,
V
∼
A
2
/
η
2
(where
η
is the viscosity of the ambient fluid), whereas at large enough
A
,
V
is independent of the force and is determined solely by the stroke cycle frequency and the swimmer size. This finding starkly contrasts with models where motion is based on ciliary and flagellar activity, where
V
∼
A
/
η
. To conclude, two definitions of efficiency as put forward in the literature are analyzed with distinct outcomes. We find that one type of efficiency has an optimum as a function of confinement while the other does not. Future perspectives are outlined.
Many eukaryotic cells undergo frequent shape changes to move forward. We pinpoint several features which are unique to this kind of swimming. For example, the nature of the swimmer (pusher or puller) and its velocity are strongly affected by the confinement. |
---|---|
ISSN: | 1744-683X 1744-6848 |
DOI: | 10.1039/c6sm00934d |