Friday, September 30, 2005

Prof. Raymond E. Goldstein

Department of Physics and BIO5 Institute, University of Arizona

"The Physics of Multicelluarity"

2:00 pm in room P-148

Abstract:  One of the most fundamental issues in evolutionary biology is the transition from unicellularity to multicellularity, and the cellular differentiation that accompanies it.  Many of the constraints, costs, and benefits of this transition have their roots in the physics of transport and mixing.  One can view "multicellularity" as taking two forms: that produced by many unicellular organisms acting collectively, and that of permanently multicellular organisms. I describe very recent experimental results on these two types of systems, in which the biology of chemotaxis, metabolism and cell-cell signaling is intimately connected to the physics of buoyancy, diffusion, and mixing.  These results include the discovery in bacterial suspensions of the "chemotactic Boycott effect" and large-scale coherence characterized by transient, recurring vortex streets and high-speed jets of cooperative  swimming.  Complementary experiments on photosynthetic colonial green algae reveal that the flagella on the thousands of surface cells, which confer phototactic motility, also play a crucial role in driving advective transport, thus allowing larger organisms to circumvent a diffusive bottleneck to nutrient uptake.  In both cases, these large Peclet number flows fundamentally alter the transport of metabolites and chemical messengers in such systems.  Implications for evolutionary transitions are discussed.