Microbial Active Matter: A Topological Framework

Topology transcends boundaries that conventionally delineate physical, biological, and engineering sciences. Our ability to mathematically describe topology, combined with recent access to precision tracking and manipulation approaches, has triggered a fresh appreciation of topological ramifications...

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Main Author: Anupam Sengupta
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Physics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphy.2020.00184/full
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spelling doaj-ab9877475085490cb90e4963f7eb672b2020-11-25T03:27:55ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Physics2296-424X2020-06-01810.3389/fphy.2020.00184517227Microbial Active Matter: A Topological FrameworkAnupam SenguptaTopology transcends boundaries that conventionally delineate physical, biological, and engineering sciences. Our ability to mathematically describe topology, combined with recent access to precision tracking and manipulation approaches, has triggered a fresh appreciation of topological ramifications in biological systems. Microbial ecosystems, a classic example of living matter, offer a rich test bed for exploring the role of topological defects in shaping community compositions, structure, and functions spanning orders in length and time scales. Microbial activity—characteristic of such structured, out-of-equilibrium systems—triggers emergent processes that endow evolutionary and ecological benefits to microbial communities. The scene stealer of this developing cross-disciplinary field of research is the topological defects: singularities that nucleate due to spontaneous symmetry breaking within the microbial system or within the surrounding material field. The interplay of geometry, order, and topology elicit novel, if not unexpected dynamics that are at the heart of active and emergent processes in such living systems. In this short review, I have put together a summary of the key recent advances that highlight the interface of active liquid crystal physics and the physical ecology of microbes; and combined it with original data from experiments on sessile species as a case to demonstrate how this interface offers a biophysical framework that could help to decode and harness active microbial processes in true ecological settings. Topology and its functional manifestations—a crucial and well-timed topic—offer a rich opportunity for both experimentalists and theoreticians willing to take up an exciting journey across scales and disciplines.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphy.2020.00184/fullactive mattermicrobial ecologymicroscale biophysicsliquid crystalsanisotropytopological defects
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anupam Sengupta
spellingShingle Anupam Sengupta
Microbial Active Matter: A Topological Framework
Frontiers in Physics
active matter
microbial ecology
microscale biophysics
liquid crystals
anisotropy
topological defects
author_facet Anupam Sengupta
author_sort Anupam Sengupta
title Microbial Active Matter: A Topological Framework
title_short Microbial Active Matter: A Topological Framework
title_full Microbial Active Matter: A Topological Framework
title_fullStr Microbial Active Matter: A Topological Framework
title_full_unstemmed Microbial Active Matter: A Topological Framework
title_sort microbial active matter: a topological framework
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Physics
issn 2296-424X
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Topology transcends boundaries that conventionally delineate physical, biological, and engineering sciences. Our ability to mathematically describe topology, combined with recent access to precision tracking and manipulation approaches, has triggered a fresh appreciation of topological ramifications in biological systems. Microbial ecosystems, a classic example of living matter, offer a rich test bed for exploring the role of topological defects in shaping community compositions, structure, and functions spanning orders in length and time scales. Microbial activity—characteristic of such structured, out-of-equilibrium systems—triggers emergent processes that endow evolutionary and ecological benefits to microbial communities. The scene stealer of this developing cross-disciplinary field of research is the topological defects: singularities that nucleate due to spontaneous symmetry breaking within the microbial system or within the surrounding material field. The interplay of geometry, order, and topology elicit novel, if not unexpected dynamics that are at the heart of active and emergent processes in such living systems. In this short review, I have put together a summary of the key recent advances that highlight the interface of active liquid crystal physics and the physical ecology of microbes; and combined it with original data from experiments on sessile species as a case to demonstrate how this interface offers a biophysical framework that could help to decode and harness active microbial processes in true ecological settings. Topology and its functional manifestations—a crucial and well-timed topic—offer a rich opportunity for both experimentalists and theoreticians willing to take up an exciting journey across scales and disciplines.
topic active matter
microbial ecology
microscale biophysics
liquid crystals
anisotropy
topological defects
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphy.2020.00184/full
work_keys_str_mv AT anupamsengupta microbialactivematteratopologicalframework
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