4.6 Article

Experiments and theory of undulatory locomotion in a simple structured medium

期刊

JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY INTERFACE
卷 9, 期 73, 页码 1809-1823

出版社

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2011.0856

关键词

locomotion; biofluid dynamics; fluid-structure interactions; complex media; C. elegans

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [NSF-CMMI-0700669, NSF-DMS-0652775, NSF-DMS-0821520]

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Undulatory locomotion of micro-organisms through geometrically complex, fluidic environments is ubiquitous in nature and requires the organism to negotiate both hydrodynamic effects and geometrical constraints. To understand locomotion through such media, we experimentally investigate swimming of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans through fluid-filled arrays of micro-pillars and conduct numerical simulations based on a mechanical model of the worm that incorporates hydrodynamic and contact interactions with the lattice. We show that the nematode's path, speed and gait are significantly altered by the presence of the obstacles and depend strongly on lattice spacing. These changes and their dependence on lattice spacing are captured, both qualitatively and quantitatively, by our purely mechanical model. Using the model, we demonstrate that purely mechanical interactions between the swimmer and obstacles can produce complex trajectories, gait changes and velocity fluctuations, yielding some of the life-like dynamics exhibited by the real nematode. Our results show that mechanics, rather than biological sensing and behaviour, can explain some of the observed changes in the worm's locomotory dynamics.

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