Mathematical embryology: the fluid mechanics of nodal cilia
David J. Smith, Andrew A. Smith, John R. Blake

TL;DR
This paper reviews and develops mathematical models of nodal cilia-driven flow in embryonic development, introducing a new regularized stokeslet model that accounts for membrane effects and predicts flow patterns crucial for left-right symmetry breaking.
Contribution
It introduces a novel regularized stokeslet model incorporating membrane effects, enhancing the understanding of flow dynamics in embryonic nodal cilia.
Findings
Flow reversal occurs due to membrane presence but no continuous reverse flow near epithelium.
The stresslet far-field is diminished in membrane models.
Vesicle transport is generally leftward with complex trajectories.
Abstract
Left-right symmetry breaking is critical to vertebrate embryonic development; in many species this process begins with cilia-driven flow in a structure termed the `node'. Primary `whirling' cilia, tilted towards the posterior, transport morphogen-containing vesicles towards the left, initiating left-right asymmetric development. We review recent theoretical models based on the point-force stokeslet and point-torque rotlet singularities, explaining how rotation and surface-tilt produce directional flow. Analysis of image singularity systems enforcing the no-slip condition shows how tilted rotation produces a far-field `stresslet' directional flow, and how time-dependent point-force and time-independent point-torque models are in this respect equivalent. Associated slender body theory analysis is reviewed; this approach enables efficient and accurate simulation of three-dimensional…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Microtubule and mitosis dynamics · Genetic and Kidney Cyst Diseases
