Data di Pubblicazione:
2023
Abstract:
Sperm swimming is crucial to fertilize the egg, in nature and in assisted reproductive technologies. Modeling
the sperm dynamics involves elasticity, hydrodynamics, internal active forces, and out-of-equilibrium noise. Here
we give experimental evidence in favor of the relevance of energy dissipation for sperm beating fluctuations. For
each motile cell, we reconstruct the time evolution of the two main tail's spatial modes, which together trace
a noisy limit cycle characterized by a maximum level of precision pmax. Our results indicate pmax ~ 102 s-1,
remarkably close to the estimated precision of a dynein molecular motor actuating the flagellum, which is
bounded by its energy dissipation rate according to the thermodynamic uncertainty relation. Further experiments
under oxygen deprivation show that pmax decays with energy consumption, as it occurs for a single molecular
motor. Both observations are explained by conjecturing a high level of coordination among the conformational
changes of dynein motors. This conjecture is supported by a theoretical model for the beating of an ideal
flagellum actuated by a collection of motors, including a motor-motor nearest-neighbor coupling of strength
K: When K is small the precision of a large flagellum is much higher than the single motor one. On the contrary,
when K is large the two become comparable. Based upon our strong-motor-coupling conjecture, old and new
data coming from different kinds of flagella can be collapsed together on a simple master curve.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
--
Elenco autori:
DI LEONARDO, Roberto; Puglisi, Andrea; Maggi, Claudio; Saglimbeni, Filippo; CARMONA SOSA, Viridiana; Nath, Binita
Link alla scheda completa:
Pubblicato in: