Dataset and codes underlying "The younger flagellum sets the beat for C. reinhardtii"
doi: 10.4121/21972695
The dataset presented are what underlies the paper "The younger flagellum sets the beat for C. reinhardtii". Codes for modeling and plotting, and the hydrodynamic computations' data are included.
Eukaryotes swim by coordinating flagellar movements and adjust their direction by fine-tuning this coordination. C. reinhardtii, a model organism, uses synchronous flagellar beating for propulsion and adjusts direction by modulating beating amplitudes. This strategy relies on inherent flagellar differences and effective coordination during synchronous beating. Mechanical connections support synchrony, but how flagellar differences persist during synchrony is unclear. This study combines experiments, computations, and modeling to reveal the roles of each flagellum in synchronous beating. By selectively loading each flagellum, researchers found that coordinated beating responds mainly to loading on the cis flagellum, indicating an asymmetric response due to unilateral coupling between flagella. These results highlight distinct roles for each flagellum in coordination and have implications for the behavior of biflagellates.
- 2024-05-15 first online, published, posted
- ERC starting grants no. 716712
- ERC starting grants no. 101042612
Beijing National Laboratory for Condensed Matter Physics, Institute of Physics,
Chinese Academy of Sciences
DATA
- 6,334 bytesMD5:
fe2f458477eed5aac241b813f49f29ed
README.txt - 3,492 bytesMD5:
ea2b5de677e3c63ec91b24be4d39b080
ArnoldTongue_model.m - 45,631,612 bytesMD5:
0e4a23a74b456c16adaf8bbe843d3eea
Data.zip - 3,569 bytesMD5:
45bb9f2e9e311a47f7dbf9b57fdd0873
markSync.m - 5,284 bytesMD5:
55daaf858ce13631c626457ab1b9fea5
PhaseDynamicsAtDifferentDetuning_model.m - 2,838 bytesMD5:
12201f75cdf4960beead83b2c342126d
segmentBooleanSig.m - 4,050 bytesMD5:
2e57ffd33e844d8e5e4294664ce88ea3
SyncProfiles_model.m -
download all files (zip)
45,657,179 bytes unzipped