Nonequilibrium dynamics of membraneless active droplets
Chenxi Liu, Ding Cao, Siyu Liu, Yilin Wu

TL;DR
This study investigates how active matter, like bacteria, influences liquid-liquid phase separation, leading to stable, motile membraneless droplets with arrested coarsening and unique nonequilibrium behaviors.
Contribution
We developed a bacteria-polymer active phase separation system to explore how active inclusions affect LLPS dynamics, revealing mechanisms for arrested phase separation and droplet stability.
Findings
Active bacteria accelerate initial droplet formation
Droplet coarsening is arrested, leading to stable droplets
Active stresses induce long-wavelength fluctuations and persistent motion
Abstract
Membraneless droplets or liquid condensates formed via liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) play a pivotal role in cell biology and hold potential for biomedical engineering. While membraneless droplets are often studied in the context of interactions between passive components, it is increasingly recognized that active matter inclusions, such as molecular motors and catalytic enzymes in cells, play important roles in the formation, transport and interaction of membraneless droplets. Here we developed a bacteria-polymer active phase separation system to study the nonequilibrium effect of active matter inclusions on the LLPS dynamics. We found that the presence of bacterial active matter accelerated the initial condensation of phase-separated liquid droplets but subsequently arrested the droplet coarsening process, resulting in a stable suspension of membraneless active droplets packed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicro and Nano Robotics · Pickering emulsions and particle stabilization · Cellular Mechanics and Interactions
