Vesicle propulsion in haptotaxis : a local model
Preprint
- 11 February 2000
Abstract
We study theoretically vesicle locomotion due to haptotaxis. Haptotaxis is referred to motion induced by an adhesion gradient on a substrate. The problem is solved within a local approximation where a Rayleigh-type dissipation is adopted. The dynamical model is akin to the Rousse model for polymers. A powerful gauge-field invariant formulation is used to solve a dynamical model which includes a kind of dissipation due to bond breaking/restoring with the substrate. For a stationary situation where the vesicle acquires a constant drift velocity, we formulate the propulsion problem in terms of a nonlinear eigenvalue (the a priori unknown drift velocity) one of Barenblat-Zeldovitch type. A counting argument shows that the velocity belongs to a discrete set. For a relatively tense vesicle, we provide an analytical expression for the drift velocity as a function of relevant parameters. We find good agreement with the full numerical solution. Despite the oversimplification of the model it allows the identification of a relevant quantity, namely the adhesion length, which turns out to be crucial also in the nonlocal model in the presence of hydrodynamics, a situation on which we have recently reported [I. Cantat, and C. Misbah, Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 83}, 235 (1999)] and which constitutes the subject of a forthcoming extensive study.Keywords
All Related Versions
- Version 1, 2000-02-11, ArXiv
- Published version: The European Physical Journal E, 3 (4), 403.
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