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Emergence of behaviour in a self-organized living matter network

Philipp Fleig, Mirna Kramar, Michael Wilczek, Karen Alim

2021eLife21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

What is the origin of behaviour? Although typically associated with a nervous system, simple organisms also show complex behaviours. Among them, the slime mold Physarum polycephalum , a giant single cell, is ideally suited to study emergence of behaviour. Here, we show how locomotion and morphological adaptation behaviour emerge from self-organized patterns of rhythmic contractions of the actomyosin lining of the tubes making up the network-shaped organism. We quantify the spatio-temporal contraction dynamics by decomposing experimentally recorded contraction patterns into spatial contraction modes. Notably, we find a continuous spectrum of modes, as opposed to a few dominant modes. Our data suggests that the continuous spectrum of modes allows for dynamic transitions between a plethora of specific behaviours with transitions marked by highly irregular contraction states. By mapping specific behaviours to states of active contractions, we provide the basis to understand behaviour’s complexity as a function of biomechanical dynamics.

Topics & Concepts

Physarum polycephalumContraction (grammar)Biological systemPhysarumNeuroscienceNetwork dynamicsStatistical physicsComputer scienceBiologyPhysicsEvolutionary biologyMathematicsEndocrinologyCell biologyDiscrete mathematicsSlime Mold and Myxomycetes ResearchPlant and Biological Electrophysiology StudiesBiocrusts and Microbial Ecology
Emergence of behaviour in a self-organized living matter network | Litcius