Dynamic supercoiling bifurcations of growing elastic filaments
Charles W. Wolgemuth, Raymond E. Goldstein, and Thomas R. Powers

TL;DR
This paper develops a dynamic theory for growing elastic filaments that explains how supercoiled structures like solenoids and plectonemes form due to growth-induced twist and buckling instabilities, with potential biological applications.
Contribution
It introduces a novel nonautonomous model for growing elastic filaments with twist, analyzing pattern selection and bifurcations in supercoiling phenomena.
Findings
Growth depletes filament twist, inducing supercoils.
Two regimes: buckling for small twist, writhing for large twist.
Model explains formation of biological supercoiled structures.
Abstract
Certain bacteria form filamentous colonies when the cells fail to separate after dividing. In Bacillus subtilis, Bacillus thermus, and cyanobacteria, the filaments can wrap into complex supercoiled structures as the cells grow. The structures may be solenoids or plectonemes, with or without branches in the latter case. Any microscopic theory of these morphological instabilities must address the nature of pattern selection in the presence of growth, for growth renders the problem nonautonomous and the bifurcations dynamic. To gain insight into these phenomena, we formulate a general theory for growing elastic filaments with bending and twisting resistance in a viscous medium, and study an illustrative model problem: a growing filament with preferred twist, closed into a loop. Growth depletes the twist, inducing a twist strain. The closure of the loop prevents the filament from unwinding…
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