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You are here: Home / Seminars / Experimental physics and modelling / The emergence of contractility in biological fiber networks

The emergence of contractility in biological fiber networks

Pierre Ronceray (Princeton Univ., USA)
When Nov 14, 2017
from 10:45 to 12:00
Where Centre Blaise Pascal
Attendees Pierre Ronceray
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Large-scale force generation is essential for biological functions such as cell motility, embryonic development, and muscle contraction. In these processes, active forces generated at the molecular level by motor proteins are transmitted by disordered fiber networks, resulting in large-scale contractile stresses. I will present a comprehensive theoretical study of force transmission in these networks. While the linear response to small forces is remarkably simple, taking into account the nonlinear properties of the filaments yields strikingly counter-intuitive effects such as the reversal of extensile forces into contractile ones. These forces are furthermore amplified as they induce buckling on large scales in the network, resulting in large tensile stresses at the macroscopic scale. Our predictions are quantitatively consistent with experiments on reconstituted tissues and actomyosin networks, and shed light on the role of the network microstructure in shaping active stresses in cells and tissue.

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