Issue 12, 2020

How many ways a cell can move: the modes of self-propulsion of an active drop

Abstract

Numerous physical models have been proposed to explain how cell motility emerges from internal activity, mostly focused on how crawling motion arises from internal processes. Here we offer a classification of self-propulsion mechanisms based on general physical principles, showing that crawling is not the only way for cells to move on a substrate. We consider a thin drop of active matter on a planar substrate and fully characterize its autonomous motion for all three possible sources of driving: (i) the stresses induced in the bulk by active components, which allow in particular tractionless motion, (ii) the self-propulsion of active components at the substrate, which gives rise to crawling motion, and (iii) a net capillary force, possibly self-generated, and coupled to internal activity. We determine travelling-wave solutions to the lubrication equations as a function of a dimensionless activity parameter for each mode of motion. Numerical simulations are used to characterize the drop motion over a wide range of activity magnitudes, and explicit analytical solutions in excellent agreement with the simulations are derived in the weak-activity regime.

Graphical abstract: How many ways a cell can move: the modes of self-propulsion of an active drop

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
12 Jan 2020
Accepted
26 Feb 2020
First published
27 Feb 2020

Soft Matter, 2020,16, 3106-3124

How many ways a cell can move: the modes of self-propulsion of an active drop

A. Loisy, J. Eggers and T. B. Liverpool, Soft Matter, 2020, 16, 3106 DOI: 10.1039/D0SM00070A

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