Chemotaxis of cargo-carrying self-propelled particles
Hidde D. Vuijk, Holger Merlitz, Michael Lang, Abhinav Sharma, Jens-Uwe, Sommer

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that self-propelled particles can exhibit chemotaxis by performing work on cargo, moving toward higher activity regions, revealing a simple mechanism for chemotaxis without complex sensing.
Contribution
The study introduces a minimal theoretical model showing active particles can chemotax by interacting with cargo, highlighting a transition from anti-chemotaxis to chemotaxis with chain length.
Findings
Active particles move toward higher activity regions when bound to cargo.
A crossover from anti-chemotactic to chemotactic behavior is predicted.
Connecting particles in chains induces chemotaxis in longer assemblies.
Abstract
Active particles with their characteristic feature of self-propulsion are regarded as the simplest models for motility in living systems. The accumulation of active particles in low activity regions has led to the general belief that chemotaxis requires additional features and at least a minimal ability to process information and to control motion. We show that self-propelled particles display chemotaxis and move into regions of higher activity, if the particles perform work on passive objects, or cargo, to which they are bound. The origin of this cooperative chemotaxis is the exploration of the activity gradient by the active particle when bound to a load, resulting in an average excess force on the load in the direction of higher activity. Using a minimalistic theoretical model, we capture the most relevant features of these active-passive dimers and in particular we predict the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Cellular Mechanics and Interactions · Molecular Communication and Nanonetworks
