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arxiv: 1304.7688 · v1 · pith:PHXVJNNXnew · submitted 2013-04-29 · ⚛️ physics.bio-ph · cond-mat.soft· physics.flu-dyn· q-bio.CB

Antiphase Synchronization in a Flagellar-Dominance Mutant of Chlamydomonas

classification ⚛️ physics.bio-ph cond-mat.softphysics.flu-dynq-bio.CB
keywords antiphasebeatingin-phasechlamydomonasflagellamutantptx1reinhardtii
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Groups of beating flagella or cilia often synchronize so that neighboring filaments have identical frequencies and phases. A prime example is provided by the unicellular biflagellate Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, which typically displays synchronous in-phase beating in a low-Reynolds number version of breaststroke swimming. We report here the discovery that ptx1, a flagellar dominance mutant of C. reinhardtii, can exhibit synchronization in precise antiphase, as in the freestyle swimming stroke. Long-duration high-speed imaging shows that ptx1 flagella switch stochastically between in-phase and antiphase states, and that the latter has a distinct waveform and significantly higher frequency, both of which are strikingly similar to those found during phase slips that stochastically interrupt in-phase beating of the wildtype. Possible mechanisms underlying these observations are discussed.

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