The Mechanics of Active Interfaces

Michael Murrell

Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineering,
Yale

Seminar Information

Seminar Series
Biomechanics & Medical Devices

Seminar Date - Time
December 3, 2021, 9:00 am
-
10:00


Abstract

At small length scales, capillary effects are significant, and thus the mechanics of soft material interfaces may be dominated by solid surface stresses and liquid surface tensions. The balance between surface and bulk properties is described by an elasto-capillary length-scale, in which equilibrium interfacial energies are constant.  However, at small length-scales in biological materials, including living cells and tissues, interfacial energies are not constant but are actively regulated and driven far from equilibrium.  Thus, the balance between surface and bulk properties depends upon the distance from equilibrium, defining a novel material parameter, what we term “active” elasto-capillarity.  Here, we model the adhesion and spreading (wetting) of living cell aggregates as ‘active droplets’, with non-equilibrium surface energy that depends upon internal stress generated by the actomyosin cytoskeleton.  Depending upon the extent of activity, the droplet may exhibit both solid and fluid-like properties, and each may adapt to the mechanics of their surroundings.  The impact of this activity-dependent adaptation challenges contemporary models of interfacial mechanics, including traditional and extensively used models of contact mechanics and wetting. Finally, we show the origin of adaptation is in the breaking of detailed balance at the molecular scale by stochastic load-dependent binding in the actomyosin cytoskeleton.

Speaker Bio

Prof. Michael Murrell received his BS at Johns Hopkins University and his Ph.D. at MIT. He then had a joint postdoctoral fellowship between the Institute for Biophysical Dynamics at the University of Chicago, and UMR 168 at the Institut Curie, in Paris, France. He now runs the Laboratory for Living Matter within the Systems Biology Institute at the Yale West Campus, as part of the Physics and Biomedical Engineering Departments at Yale University. His lab studies the non-equilibrium properties of biological systems and identifies mechanisms to inform on active material design. He is currently a visiting professor at ETH Zurich in the Materials Science Department.