Pairwise hydrodynamic interactions of synchronized spermatozoa

The journey of mammalian spermatozoa in nature is well-known to be reliant on their individual motility. Often swimming in crowded microenvironments, the progress of any single swimmer is likely dependent on their interactions with other nearby swimmers. Whilst the complex dynamics of lone spermatoz...

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Main Authors: Walker, B, Ishimoto, K, Gaffney, E
Format: Journal article
Published: American Chemical Society 2019
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author Walker, B
Ishimoto, K
Gaffney, E
author_facet Walker, B
Ishimoto, K
Gaffney, E
author_sort Walker, B
collection OXFORD
description The journey of mammalian spermatozoa in nature is well-known to be reliant on their individual motility. Often swimming in crowded microenvironments, the progress of any single swimmer is likely dependent on their interactions with other nearby swimmers. Whilst the complex dynamics of lone spermatozoa have been well-studied, the detailed effects of hydrodynamic interactions between neighbors remain unclear, with inherent nonlinearity in the governing hydrodynamics and potential dependence on the details of swimmer morphology. In this study we will attempt to elucidate the pairwise swimming behaviors of virtual spermatozoa, forming a computational representation of an unbound swimming pair and evaluating the details of their interactions via a high-accuracy boundary element method. We have explored extensive regions of parameter space to determine the pairwise interactions of synchronized spermatozoa, with synchronized swimmers often being noted in experimental observations, and have found that two-dimensional reduced autonomous dynamical systems capture the anisotropic nature of the swimming speed and stability arising from near-field hydrodynamic interactions. Focusing on two configurations of spermatozoa, namely those with swimmers located side-by-side or above and below one another, we have found that side-by-side cells attract each other, and the trajectories in the phase plane are well captured by a recently-proposed coarse-graining method of microswimmer dynamics via superposed regularised Stokeslets. In contrast, the above-below pair exhibit a remarkable stable pairwise swimming behavior, corresponding to a stable configuration of the plane autonomous system with swimmers lying approximately parallel to one another. At further reduced swimmer separations we additionally observe a marked increase in swimming velocity over individual swimmers in the bulk, potentially suggesting a competitive advantage to cooperative swimming. These latter observations are not captured by the coarse-grained regularised Stokeslet modeling, emphasizing the complexity of near-field cell-cell hydrodynamic interactions and their inherent anisotropy.
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spelling oxford-uuid:db001d2a-6a65-45fb-893a-88489615127f2022-03-27T09:07:17ZPairwise hydrodynamic interactions of synchronized spermatozoaJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:db001d2a-6a65-45fb-893a-88489615127fSymplectic Elements at OxfordAmerican Chemical Society2019Walker, BIshimoto, KGaffney, EThe journey of mammalian spermatozoa in nature is well-known to be reliant on their individual motility. Often swimming in crowded microenvironments, the progress of any single swimmer is likely dependent on their interactions with other nearby swimmers. Whilst the complex dynamics of lone spermatozoa have been well-studied, the detailed effects of hydrodynamic interactions between neighbors remain unclear, with inherent nonlinearity in the governing hydrodynamics and potential dependence on the details of swimmer morphology. In this study we will attempt to elucidate the pairwise swimming behaviors of virtual spermatozoa, forming a computational representation of an unbound swimming pair and evaluating the details of their interactions via a high-accuracy boundary element method. We have explored extensive regions of parameter space to determine the pairwise interactions of synchronized spermatozoa, with synchronized swimmers often being noted in experimental observations, and have found that two-dimensional reduced autonomous dynamical systems capture the anisotropic nature of the swimming speed and stability arising from near-field hydrodynamic interactions. Focusing on two configurations of spermatozoa, namely those with swimmers located side-by-side or above and below one another, we have found that side-by-side cells attract each other, and the trajectories in the phase plane are well captured by a recently-proposed coarse-graining method of microswimmer dynamics via superposed regularised Stokeslets. In contrast, the above-below pair exhibit a remarkable stable pairwise swimming behavior, corresponding to a stable configuration of the plane autonomous system with swimmers lying approximately parallel to one another. At further reduced swimmer separations we additionally observe a marked increase in swimming velocity over individual swimmers in the bulk, potentially suggesting a competitive advantage to cooperative swimming. These latter observations are not captured by the coarse-grained regularised Stokeslet modeling, emphasizing the complexity of near-field cell-cell hydrodynamic interactions and their inherent anisotropy.
spellingShingle Walker, B
Ishimoto, K
Gaffney, E
Pairwise hydrodynamic interactions of synchronized spermatozoa
title Pairwise hydrodynamic interactions of synchronized spermatozoa
title_full Pairwise hydrodynamic interactions of synchronized spermatozoa
title_fullStr Pairwise hydrodynamic interactions of synchronized spermatozoa
title_full_unstemmed Pairwise hydrodynamic interactions of synchronized spermatozoa
title_short Pairwise hydrodynamic interactions of synchronized spermatozoa
title_sort pairwise hydrodynamic interactions of synchronized spermatozoa
work_keys_str_mv AT walkerb pairwisehydrodynamicinteractionsofsynchronizedspermatozoa
AT ishimotok pairwisehydrodynamicinteractionsofsynchronizedspermatozoa
AT gaffneye pairwisehydrodynamicinteractionsofsynchronizedspermatozoa