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Levels of Biological Organisation: Subcellular machinery

This operates in a highly crowded environment that is hard to treat theoretically, thereby limiting current understanding of such key functions as transport, growth and division.

Related PhD Projects

Research Project: Beyond the extensile/contractile dichotomy in active nematics

Active nematics is one of the most studied situations in active matter physics, both in theory and experiments.

The University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom

Research Project: Collective tug-of-war dynamics: from molecular motors to ant groups

The emergence of directed transport as a collective behaviour of many microscopic constituents is a ubiquitous problem in the statistical physics of active particles.

The University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom

Research Project: Dynamics of interacting molecular motors

The dynamics of the sperm flagellum has been recently studied with particular attention to its fluctuations. It has been found that the precision of the flagellar beating is close to that of an individual dynein motor powering its motion, which in turn is close to the bound dictated by the thermodynamic uncertainty relation.

NANOTEC-CNR/The Sapienza University of Rome, Italy
Credit: Torben Sunkel

Research Project: Elucidating the role of mechano-signalling feedback in dense cellular collectives

Collective tissue behaviour is inherently a multiscale phenomenon that is governed by complex biochemical and mechanical processes occurring simultaneously at the molecular, cellular, and tissue scales.

TU Eindhoven, The Netherlands

Research Project: Exploring active field theories to unravel solidification of protein condensates

The spatial organisation of proteins into dense condensates, widely attributed to nonequilibrium phase separation, offers a route to recruit or sequester proteins involved in functions at the cellular level.

University of Stuttgart, Germany