Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS March Meeting 2021
Volume 66, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 15–19, 2021; Virtual; Time Zone: Central Daylight Time, USA
Session E13: Physics of Biological Active Matter II: Cell Colonies
8:00 AM–10:48 AM,
Tuesday, March 16, 2021
Sponsoring
Units:
DBIO DPOLY DSOFT
Chair: Joshua Shaevitz, Princeton University; Ricard Alert, Princeton University
Abstract: E13.00002 : Intrinsic Rhythms in a Giant Single-Celled Organism and the Interplay with Time-Dependent Drive, Explored via Self-Organized Macroscopic Waves
8:36 AM–8:48 AM
Live
Presenter:
Eldad Afik
(Division of Biology and Biological Engineering, California Institute of Technology; Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Authors:
Eldad Afik
(Division of Biology and Biological Engineering, California Institute of Technology; Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Tony J.B. Liu
(Division of Biology and Biological Engineering, California Institute of Technology)
Elliot M. Meyerowitz
(Division of Biology and Biological Engineering, California Institute of Technology; Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Caulerpa is a marine green alga with differentiated organs resembling leaves, stems and roots; while an individual can exceed a meter in size, it is a single multinucleated giant cell. Active transport has been hypothesized to play a key role in development. Yet, the most recent reports studying organelle transport in Caulerpa are over three decades old.
Using Raspberry-Pi cameras, we track over weeks the morphogenesis of tens of samples concurrently, while tracing at minute resolution the variation of green coverage; the latter is attributed to chloroplasts redistribution at whole-organism scale, and reveals a pulse-like behavior. Our observations indicate that the initiation of these waves, in regenerating algal segments cultured under periodic illumination, precedes the external light change. The temporal spectrum shows a circadian period, which persists over days even under constant illumination.
We explore the system under non-circadian periods, its relaxation times — analogous to jet lag recovery, and the limits at which the system no longer follows the period of the external drive.
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