Broken detailed balance and non-equilibrium dynamics in living systems
F. Gnesotto, F. Mura, J. Gladrow, and C.P. Broedersz

TL;DR
Living systems operate far from equilibrium, with molecular and mesoscale non-equilibrium dynamics crucial for biological functions, and new methods are emerging to detect and analyze these non-equilibrium processes.
Contribution
This paper reviews recent approaches to detect non-equilibrium dynamics in living systems, especially methods based on inferring broken detailed balance from microscopy data.
Findings
Methods to measure violation of fluctuation-dissipation theorem
Techniques to infer broken detailed balance from time-lapse data
Application of these methods to cellular structures like flagella and cytoskeleton
Abstract
Living systems operate far from thermodynamic equilibrium. Enzymatic activity can induce broken detailed balance at the molecular scale. This molecular scale breaking of detailed balance is crucial to achieve biological functions such as high-fidelity transcription and translation, sensing, adaptation, biochemical patterning, and force generation. While biological systems such as motor enzymes violate detailed balance at the molecular scale, it remains unclear how non-equilibrium dynamics manifests at the mesoscale in systems that are driven through the collective activity of many motors. Indeed, in several cellular systems the presence of non-equilibrium dynamics is not always evident at large scales. For example, in the cytoskeleton or in chromosomes one can observe stationary stochastic processes that appear at first glance thermally driven. This raises the question how…
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