Origin of rigidity in biological tissues
Date
Friday February 17, 20231:30 pm - 2:30 pm
Location
STI AM. Lisa Manning
Syracuse University
Abstract
In multicellular organisms, properly programmed collective motion is required to form tissues and organs, and this programming breaks down in diseases like cancer. Recent experimental work highlights that some organisms tune the global mechanical properties of a tissue across a fluid-solid transition to allow or prohibit cell motion and control processes such as body axis elongation. In this talk, I will highlight universal features that emerge from models developed to predict this collective behavior. I will also discuss a framework that suggests the origin of rigidity in tissues is similar to that in mechanical metamaterials, like origami, and different from those in standard materials like glasses or granular matter.
Timbits, coffee, tea will be served in STI A before the colloquium
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