Chemotactic smoothing of collective migration
Tapomoy Bhattacharjee, Daniel B. Amchin, Ricard Alert, J. A. Ott,, Sujit S. Datta

TL;DR
This study reveals how chemotactic responses enable migrating cell populations to smooth out large-scale morphological perturbations, ensuring persistent collective movement despite environmental disturbances.
Contribution
It uncovers a population-scale mechanism where chemotaxis stabilizes collective migration by counteracting destabilizing effects, based on experiments and simulations.
Findings
Chemotactic responses can stabilize collective migration.
Two modes of chemotactic influence identified: destabilizing and stabilizing.
Population smoothing occurs autonomously without external control.
Abstract
Collective migration -- the directed, coordinated motion of many self-propelled agents -- is a fascinating emergent behavior exhibited by active matter that has key functional implications for biological systems. Extensive studies have elucidated the different ways in which this phenomenon may arise. Nevertheless, how collective migration can persist when a population is confronted with perturbations, which inevitably arise in complex settings, is poorly understood. Here, by combining experiments and simulations, we describe a mechanism by which collectively migrating populations smooth out large-scale perturbations in their overall morphology, enabling their constituents to continue to migrate together. We focus on the canonical example of chemotactic migration of Escherichia coli, in which fronts of cells move via directed motion, or chemotaxis, in response to a self-generated…
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