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Symmetry breaking and collective effects in biological physics - Daniel Riveline (IGBMC, Strasbourg)

Séminaire

Le 30 septembre 2024

riveline

Daniel Riveline (IGBMC, Strasbourg)

Biological cells move, divide, change their shapes, adhere to their neighbors and environments to form tissues and organs. These phenomena are essential for a wide variety of biological processes during morphogenesis for example but their mesoscopic origins are often yet not clarified. To characterize them, out-of-equilibrium dynamics can be studied with physical experimental designs and associated theories. These topics have triggered new physical formalisms which call for original experimental calibrations and tests associating tightly quantitative biology with the design of new setups and models for living matter. I will illustrate these experiments of biological physics with the following examples : spontaneous breaking of symmetry for single-cell motion, collective effects in elongation of epithelial colonies, spontaneous rotations in 2D and in 3D. These phenomena will show that basic principles in physics can be used and challenged to unravel new cellular mechanisms with physiological relevance.

 

Contact: Giovanni Cappello

Date

Le 30 septembre 2024
Complément date

11:00

Localisation

Complément lieu

LIPhy, salle de conférence

Publié le 6 septembre 2024

Mis à jour le 6 septembre 2024