Abstract
The movement of microswimmers is often described by active Brownian particle models. Here we introduce a variant of these models with several internal states of the swimmer to describe stochastic strategies for directional swimming such as run and tumble or run and reverse that are used by microorganisms for chemotaxis. The model includes a mechanism to generate a directional bias for chemotaxis and interactions with external fields (e.g., gravity, magnetic field, fluid flow) that impose forces or torques on the swimmer. We show how this modified model can be applied to various scenarios: First, the run and tumble motion of E. coli is used to establish a paradigm for chemotaxis and investigate how it is affected by external forces. Then, we study magneto-aerotaxis in magnetotactic bacteria, which is biased not only by an oxygen gradient towards a preferred concentration, but also by magnetic fields, which exert a torque on an intracellular chain of magnets. We study the competition of magnetic alignment with active reorientation and show that the magnetic orientation can improve chemotaxis and thereby provide an advantage to the bacteria, even at rather large inclination angles of the magnetic field relative to the oxygen gradient, a case reminiscent of what is expected for the bacteria at or close to the equator. The highest gain in chemotactic velocity is obtained for run and tumble with a magnetic field parallel to the gradient, but in general a mechanism for reverse motion is necessary to swim against the magnetic field and a run and reverse strategy is more advantageous in the presence of a magnetic torque. This finding is consistent with observations that the dominant mode of directional changes in magnetotactic bacteria is reversal rather than tumbles. Moreover, it provides guidance for the design of future magnetic biohybrid swimmers.
Highlights
The motion of many microorganisms as well as synthetic and biohybrid microswimmers is based on a directed self-propulsion over short time and length scale
We propose a modified Active Brownian particle model to describe bacterial swimming behavior under the influence of external forces and torques, in particular of a magnetic torque
This type of interaction is important for magnetic biohybrids and for magnetotactic
Summary
The motion of many microorganisms as well as synthetic and biohybrid microswimmers is based on a directed self-propulsion over short time and length scale. These swimmers typically perform (persistent) random walks due to either the Brownian rotation of their direction of propulsion, which is unavoidable due to their small size, or due to active mechanisms of re-orientation such as the tumbling of bacteria [1,2,3]. Biasing this random motion is key to directional motion on large scales. A number of interesting questions relate to the combination of two mechanisms of directional guidance: Which strategies do microorganisms use to resolve conflicts between different directional inputs such as chemotaxis and external forces? Which strategies could be implemented in synthetic systems?
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