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Swimming Euglena respond to confinement with a behavioral change enabling effective crawling.


ABSTRACT: Some euglenids, a family of aquatic unicellular organisms, can develop highly concerted, large amplitude peristaltic body deformations. This remarkable behavior has been known for centuries. Yet, its function remains controversial, and is even viewed as a functionless ancestral vestige. Here, by examining swimming Euglena gracilis in environments of controlled crowding and geometry, we show that this behavior is triggered by confinement. Under these conditions, it allows cells to switch from unviable flagellar swimming to a new and highly robust mode of fast crawling, which can deal with extreme geometric confinement and turn both frictional and hydraulic resistance into propulsive forces. To understand how a single cell can control such an adaptable and robust mode of locomotion, we developed a computational model of the motile apparatus of Euglena cells consisting of an active striated cell envelope. Our modeling shows that gait adaptability does not require specific mechanosensitive feedback but instead can be explained by the mechanical self-regulation of an elastic and extended motor system. Our study thus identifies a locomotory function and the operating principles of the adaptable peristaltic body deformation of Euglena cells.

SUBMITTER: Noselli G 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6522345 | biostudies-literature | 2019 May

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Swimming <i>Euglena</i> respond to confinement with a behavioral change enabling effective crawling.

Noselli Giovanni G   Beran Alfred A   Arroyo Marino M   DeSimone Antonio A  

Nature physics 20190218 5


Some euglenids, a family of aquatic unicellular organisms, can develop highly concerted, large amplitude peristaltic body deformations. This remarkable behavior has been known for centuries. Yet, its function remains controversial, and is even viewed as a functionless ancestral vestige. Here, by examining swimming <i>Euglena gracilis</i> in environments of controlled crowding and geometry, we show that this behavior is triggered by confinement. Under these conditions, it allows cells to switch f  ...[more]

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