Department of Complex Fluids, Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization, Göttingen, Germany.
Biophys J. 2012 Sep 19;103(6):1162-9. doi: 10.1016/j.bpj.2012.08.020.
The dynamics of isolated microswimmers are studied in bounded flow using the African trypanosome, a unicellular parasite, as the model organism. With the help of a microfluidics platform, cells are subjected to flow and found to follow an oscillatory path that is well fit by a sine wave. The frequency and amplitudes of the oscillatory trajectories are dependent on the flow velocity and cell orientation. When traveling in such a manner, trypanosomes orient upstream while downstream-facing cells tumble within the same streamline. A comparison with immotile trypanosomes demonstrates that self-propulsion is essential to the trajectories of trypanosomes even at flow velocities up to ∼40 times higher than their own swimming speed. These studies reveal important swimming dynamics that may be generally pertinent to the transport of microswimmers in flow and may be relevant to microbial pathogenesis.
采用单细胞寄生虫——非洲锥虫作为模式生物,研究了隔离微游泳者在受限流动中的动力学。借助微流控平台,使细胞受到流动的作用,并发现它们沿着正弦波很好地拟合的振荡路径运动。振荡轨迹的频率和幅度取决于流速和细胞方向。当以这种方式运动时,锥虫向上游定向,而下游面向的细胞在同一流线上翻滚。与无动力锥虫的比较表明,即使在流速高达自身游动速度的 40 倍左右时,自推进对于锥虫的轨迹也是必不可少的。这些研究揭示了重要的游动动力学,这些动力学可能与微游泳者在流动中的输运普遍相关,并且可能与微生物发病机制相关。