Andreas Hilfinger

Dynamics of Cilia and Flagella

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http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:swb:14-1139826522460-88534

Kurzfassung in Englisch

Cilia and flagella are hair-like appendages of eukaryotic cells. They are actively bending structures that exhibit regular beat patterns and thereby play an important role in many different circumstances where motion on a cellular level is required. Most dramatic is the effect of nodal cilia whose vortical motion leads to a fluid flow that is directly responsible for establishing the left-right axis during embryological development in many vertebrate species, but examples range from the propulsion of single cells, such as the swimming of sperm, to the transport of mucus along epithelial cells, e.g. in the ciliated trachea. Cilia and flagella contain an evolutionary highly conserved structure called the axoneme, whose characteristic architecture is based on a cylindrical arrangement of elastic filaments (microtubules). In the presence of a chemical fuel (ATP), molecular motors (dynein) exert shear forces between neighbouring microtubules, leading to a bending of the axoneme through structural constraints. We address the following two questions: How can these organelles generate regular oscillatory beat patterns in the absence of a biochemical signal regulating the activity of the force generating elements? And how can the beat patterns be so different for apparently very similar structures? We present a theoretical description of the axonemal structure as an actively bending elastic cylinder, and show that in such a system bending waves emerge from a non-oscillatory state via a dynamic instability. The corresponding beat patterns are solutions to a set of coupled partial differential equations presented herein.

weitere Metadaten

übersetzter Titel
(Deutsch)
Bewegung von Zilien und Geißeln
Schlagwörter
(Deutsch)
Axonem, Bewegung bei kleinen Reynolds Zahlen, Biophysik, Flagellen, Geißeln, Molekulare Motoren, Nodale Zilien, Physik, Selbstorganisierte Schlagmuster, Situs inversus, Spermien, Wimpern, Zilien
Schlagwörter
(Englisch)
Situs inversus, axoneme, biophysics, cilia, dynein, flagella, left-right axis formation, low Reynolds number dynamics, molecular motors, nodal cilia, physics, spermatozoa, spontaneous oscillations
SWD SchlagworteCilie, Flagelline, Geißel <Biologie>, Molekularer Motor, Reynolds-Zahl, Selbstorganisation, Spermium, Zilie
DDC Klassifikation530
RVK KlassifikationUF 5000
Institution(en) 
InstitutionTechnische Universität Dresden
AbteilungMathematik und Naturwissenschaften, Physik, Institut für Biophysik
BetreuerProf. Frank Jülicher
GutachterProf. Raymond Goldstein
Prof. Frank Jülicher
Prof. Jonathon Howard
DokumententypDissertation
SpracheEnglisch
Tag d. Einreichung (bei der Fakultät)24.10.2005
Tag d. Verteidigung / Kolloquiums / Prüfung07.02.2006
Veröffentlichungsdatum (online)14.01.2006
persistente URNurn:nbn:de:swb:14-1139826522460-88534

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