English

Patch coalescence as a mechanism for eukaryotic directional sensing

Statistical Mechanics 2009-11-13 v1 Biological Physics Cell Behavior

Abstract

Eukaryotic cells possess a sensible chemical compass allowing them to orient toward sources of soluble chemicals. The extracellular chemical signal triggers separation of the cell membrane into two domains populated by different phospholipid molecules and oriented along the signal anisotropy. We propose a theory of this polarization process, which is articulated into subsequent stages of germ nucleation, patch coarsening and merging into a single domain. We find that the polarization time, tϵt_\epsilon, depends on the anisotropy degree ϵ\epsilon through the power law tϵϵ2t_\epsilon\propto \epsilon^{-2}, and that in a cell of radius RR there should exist a threshold value ϵthR1\epsilon_\mathrm{th}\propto R^{-1} for the smallest detectable anisotropy.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0810.5409,
  title  = {Patch coalescence as a mechanism for eukaryotic directional sensing},
  author = {A. Gamba and I. Kolokolov and V. Lebedev and G. Ortenzi},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0810.5409},
  year   = {2009}
}
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