Nonlinear dynamics and fluctuations in biological systems (Habilitation thesis)
Benjamin M. Friedrich

TL;DR
This thesis explores the nonlinear dynamics of biological systems, focusing on motility control and pattern formation, with detailed studies on flagellar synchronization, noise effects, and robustness in cellular motility.
Contribution
It introduces a new physical mechanism for flagellar synchronization via mechanical self-stabilization, independent of hydrodynamic interactions, supported by experimental data.
Findings
Mechanical self-stabilization can synchronize flagella without hydrodynamic coupling.
Flagellar beating exhibits non-equilibrium fluctuations due to stochastic motor activity.
The proposed models match experimental observations of flagellar dynamics.
Abstract
The present habilitation thesis in theoretical biological physics addresses two central dynamical processes in cells and organisms: (i) active motility and motility control and (ii) self-organized pattern formation. The unifying theme is the nonlinear dynamics of biological function and its robustness in the presence of strong fluctuations, structural variations, and external perturbations. We theoretically investigate motility control at the cellular scale, using cilia and flagella as ideal model system. Cilia and flagella are highly conserved slender cell appendages that exhibit spontaneous bending waves. This flagellar beat represents a prime example of a chemo-mechanical oscillator, which is driven by the collective dynamics of molecular motors inside the flagellar axoneme. We study the nonlinear dynamics of flagellar swimming, steering, and synchronization, which encompasses shape…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Molecular Communication and Nanonetworks · Photoreceptor and optogenetics research
