Physics Dept. Seminar
December 5, Monday
Pattern
formation in biological systems via mechanical instabilities and phase separation
Prof. Andrej Kosmrlj
Princeton Univ.
(Biological/Materials
Physics, Host: Prodan)
Room: ECE 202
Time: 11:45 am -
12:45 pm with 11:30 am teatime
Pattern
formation is ubiquitous in biological systems. While pattern formations are
often associated with Turing-like reaction-diffusion systems, biology also
exploits many other mechanisms such as mechanical instabilities and phase
separation. In this talk, I will discuss how mechanical instabilities cause the
wrinkling of bacterial biofilms and branching in developing lungs, and how
phase separation is exploited to achieve the target morphology of intracellular
condensates. Bacterial biofilms grown on substrates form wrinkled patterns that
can be manipulated by modifying the substrate stiffness. We showed that the
wavelength of wrinkles is consistent with the mechanical stability of
compressed films on soft substrates. Furthermore, we demonstrated that the
spatiotemporal pattern of wrinkles can be predicted by a continuum
chemo-mechanical model that incorporates diffusion of nutrients and their
uptake by bacteria, growth of the biofilm, surface friction, and the ensuing mechanical
stresses and deformations of the biofilm. In the second part, I will discuss
the branching morphogenesis of lungs. By combining experiments and modeling we
showed that the patterned formation of stiff smooth muscles and their
contractions physically sculpt new branches of growing epithelium. I will also
comment on how we are going to use these insights to design an optogenetic
system to engineer artificial lung organoids. In the last part, I will discuss,
how interfacial energies between separated phases in multicomponent liquid
mixtures regulate the morphology of intracellular condensates. We developed a
graph theory approach to predict the morphology of coexisting phases from a
given set of interfacial energies (forward problem), enumerate all topologically
distinct morphologies, and reverse engineer conditions for interfacial energies
that produce the target morphology (inverse problem).