649 research outputs found
The role of body rotation in bacterial flagellar bundling
In bacterial chemotaxis, E. coli cells drift up chemical gradients by a
series of runs and tumbles. Runs are periods of directed swimming, and tumbles
are abrupt changes in swimming direction. Near the beginning of each run, the
rotating helical flagellar filaments which propel the cell form a bundle. Using
resistive-force theory, we show that the counter-rotation of the cell body
necessary for torque balance is sufficient to wrap the filaments into a bundle,
even in the absence of the swirling flows produced by each individual filament
Twirling Elastica: Kinks, Viscous Drag, and Torsional Stress
Biological filaments such as DNA or bacterial flagella are typically curved
in their natural states. To elucidate the interplay of viscous drag, twisting,
and bending in the overdamped dynamics of such filaments, we compute the
steady-state torsional stress and shape of a rotating rod with a kink. Drag
deforms the rod, ultimately extending or folding it depending on the kink
angle. For certain kink angles and kink locations, both states are possible at
high rotation rates. The agreement between our macroscopic experiments and the
theory is good, with no adjustable parameters.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Genome-wide analyses of Liberibacter species provides insights into evolution, phylogenetic relationships, and virulence factors.
'Candidatus Liberibacter' species are insect-transmitted, phloem-limited α-Proteobacteria in the order of Rhizobiales. The citrus industry is facing significant challenges due to huanglongbing, associated with infection from 'Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus' (Las). In order to gain greater insight into 'Ca. Liberibacter' biology and genetic diversity, we have performed genome sequencing and comparative analyses of diverse 'Ca. Liberibacter' species, including those that can infect citrus. Our phylogenetic analysis differentiates 'Ca. Liberibacter' species and Rhizobiales in separate clades and suggests stepwise evolution from a common ancestor splitting first into nonpathogenic Liberibacter crescens followed by diversification of pathogenic 'Ca. Liberibacter' species. Further analysis of Las genomes from different geographical locations revealed diversity among isolates from the United States. Our phylogenetic study also indicates multiple Las introduction events in California and spread of the pathogen from Florida to Texas. Texan Las isolates were closely related, while Florida and Asian isolates exhibited the most genetic variation. We have identified conserved Sec translocon (SEC)-dependent effectors likely involved in bacterial survival and virulence of Las and analysed their expression in their plant host (citrus) and insect vector (Diaphorina citri). Individual SEC-dependent effectors exhibited differential expression patterns between host and vector, indicating that Las uses its effector repertoire to differentially modulate diverse organisms. Collectively, this work provides insights into the evolution of 'Ca. Liberibacter' species, the introduction of Las in the United States and identifies promising Las targets for disease management
The optimal elastic flagellum
Motile eukaryotic cells propel themselves in viscous fluids by passing waves
of bending deformation down their flagella. An infinitely long flagellum
achieves a hydrodynamically optimal low-Reynolds number locomotion when the
angle between its local tangent and the swimming direction remains constant
along its length. Optimal flagella therefore adopt the shape of a helix in
three dimensions (smooth) and that of a sawtooth in two dimensions
(non-smooth). Physically, biological organisms (or engineered micro-swimmers)
must expend internal energy in order to produce the waves of deformation
responsible for the motion. Here we propose a physically-motivated derivation
of the optimal flagellum shape. We determine analytically and numerically the
shape of the flagellar wave which leads to the fastest swimming while
minimizing an appropriately-defined energetic expenditure. Our novel approach
is to define an energy which includes not only the work against the surrounding
fluid, but also (1) the energy stored elastically in the bending of the
flagellum, (2) the energy stored elastically in the internal sliding of the
polymeric filaments which are responsible for the generation of the bending
waves (microtubules), and (3) the viscous dissipation due to the presence of an
internal fluid. This approach regularizes the optimal sawtooth shape for
two-dimensional deformation at the expense of a small loss in hydrodynamic
efficiency. The optimal waveforms of finite-size flagella are shown to depend
upon a competition between rotational motions and bending costs, and we observe
a surprising bias towards half-integer wave-numbers. Their final hydrodynamic
efficiencies are above 6%, significantly larger than those of swimming cells,
therefore indicating available room for further biological tuning
Twirling and Whirling: Viscous Dynamics of Rotating Elastica
Motivated by diverse phenomena in cellular biophysics, including bacterial
flagellar motion and DNA transcription and replication, we study the overdamped
nonlinear dynamics of a rotationally forced filament with twist and bend
elasticity. Competition between twist injection, twist diffusion, and writhing
instabilities is described by a novel pair of coupled PDEs for twist and bend
evolution. Analytical and numerical methods elucidate the twist/bend coupling
and reveal two dynamical regimes separated by a Hopf bifurcation: (i)
diffusion-dominated axial rotation, or twirling, and (ii) steady-state
crankshafting motion, or whirling. The consequences of these phenomena for
self-propulsion are investigated, and experimental tests proposed.Comment: To be published in Physical Review Letter
A Unifying Theory of Biological Function
A new theory that naturalizes biological function is explained and compared with earlier etiological and causal role theories. Etiological theories explain functions from how they are caused over their evolutionary history. Causal role theories analyze how functional mechanisms serve the current capacities of their containing system. The new proposal unifies the key notions of both kinds of theories, but goes beyond them by explaining how functions in an organism can exist as factors with autonomous causal efficacy. The goal-directedness and normativity of functions exist in this strict sense as well. The theory depends on an internal physiological or neural process that mimics an organismâs fitness, and modulates the organismâs variability accordingly. The structure of the internal process can be subdivided into subprocesses that monitor specific functions in an organism. The theory matches well with each intuition on a previously published list of intuited ideas about biological functions, including intuitions that have posed difficulties for other theories
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Overview of mathematical approaches used to model bacterial chemotaxis I: the single cell
Mathematical modeling of bacterial chemotaxis systems has been influential and insightful in helping to understand experimental observations. We provide here a comprehensive overview of the range of mathematical approaches used for modeling, within a single bacterium, chemotactic processes caused by changes to external gradients in its environment. Specific areas of the bacterial system which have been studied and modeled are discussed in detail, including the modeling of adaptation in response to attractant gradients, the intracellular phosphorylation cascade, membrane receptor clustering, and spatial modeling of intracellular protein signal transduction. The importance of producing robust models that address adaptation, gain, and sensitivity are also discussed. This review highlights that while mathematical modeling has aided in understanding bacterial chemotaxis on the individual cell scale and guiding experimental design, no single model succeeds in robustly describing all of the basic elements of the cell. We conclude by discussing the importance of this and the future of modeling in this area
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