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Sci. STKE, 12 July 2005 EDITORS' CHOICEHYDRODYNAMICS Poetry in MotionThe cooperative organization of dynamic biological processes often requires coordination via chemical signaling. Riedel et al. found that, when attached to a surface, a critical number of sperm cells self-organized into a hexagonally packed array of rotating vortices where each vortex consisted of about 10 hydrodynamically synchronized cells forming a quantized rotating wave. This spatial-temporal pattern of entrained sperm cells formed in the absence of chemical cell-cell signaling, leading to a new coordination concept of cooperative cilia and flagella. Thus, single cells and microorganisms can be hydrodynamically coordinated without the need for chemical signaling. I. H. Riedel, K. Kruse, J. Howard, A self-organized vortex array of hydrodynamically entrained sperm cells. Science 309, 300-303 (2005). [Abstract] [Full Text]
Citation: Poetry in Motion. Sci. STKE 2005, tw253 (2005). |
Science Signaling. ISSN 1937-9145 (online), 1945-0877 (print). Pre-2008: Science's STKE. ISSN 1525-8882