Abstract

Living systems operate far from thermodynamic equilibrium, which usually manifests as broken detailed balance at the molecular scale. At larger scales with collective function of many molecules, the presence of non-equilibrium thermodynamics may not be evident. In bacterial motility, the switching dynamics of the flagellar rotary motor was recently discovered to be operating in non-equilibrium. However, the resulting motility pattern at the mesoscale, the run-and-tumble behavior, was normally considered to be a Poisson process that can be described by a two-state equilibrium model. Here, we studied the details of the run-and-tumble behavior by following the polymorphic transformation of the flagellar filaments, observing broken detailed balance that reveals its non-equilibrium nature. Evaluation of entropy production provided a direct measure of the lack of detailed balance and a quantification of the rate of energy dissipation for bacterial run-and-tumble regulation.

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