Feedback between microscopic activity and macroscopic dynamics drives excitability and oscillations in mechanochemical matter
Tim Dullweber, Roman Belousov, Anna Erzberger

TL;DR
This paper develops a minimal model linking microscopic biochemical processes to macroscopic shape dynamics in active matter, revealing complex behaviors like oscillations and multistability driven by feedback mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces a coarse-grained framework that captures the feedback between microscopic activity and macroscopic shape changes in mechanochemical systems.
Findings
Discovery of multistability and symmetry-breaking in active matter.
Identification of excitability and self-sustained oscillations.
Universal characteristics of critical points in shape dynamics.
Abstract
The macroscopic behaviour of active matter arises from nonequilibrium microscopic processes. In soft materials, active stresses typically drive macroscopic shape changes, which in turn alter the geometry constraining the microscopic dynamics, leading to complex feedback effects. Although such mechanochemical coupling is common in living matter and associated with biological functions such as cell migration, division, and differentiation, the underlying principles are not well understood due to a lack of minimal models that bridge the scales from the microscopic biochemical processes to the macroscopic shape dynamics. To address this gap, we derive tractable coarse-grained equations from microscopic dynamics for a class of mechanochemical systems, in which biochemical signal processing is coupled to shape dynamics. Specifically, we consider molecular interactions at the surface of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMechanical and Optical Resonators
