Mammalian Sperm Cells Found to Possess Dual Modes of Swimming, According to Model

Mammalian Sperm Cells Found to Possess Dual Modes of Swimming, According to Model

A new⁤ mathematical model predicts ⁣that mammalian sperm cells have two distinct ‌swimming modes. ‌This prediction opens ⁤new questions⁣ about potential connections⁢ between ‍sperm cells’ motor activity ‌and ‍their transitions‌ to hyperactivation phases ⁣that ‌may play an‍ important role in ‍fertilization. The finding is part ‌of ⁣a ‍larger effort to use math and fluid dynamics to describe how mammalian​ sperm move

The research is led by a team of‍ engineers at the University⁣ of California ⁢San ⁣Diego, and the work is forthcoming in the journal Physical Review Fluids and a preprint is‌ currently available on the arXiv server.

Mammalian sperm cells propel themselves by beating their flagella back and forth, thanks ⁤to chemically powered motors that‍ drive waves along their flagella, which are threadlike appendages.

The researchers’ new‍ model⁣ of a swimming ⁢sperm cell captures the ‌interactions ​between⁣ its motor kinetics and changes in the‌ shape (deformations) of the flagella as well as‍ the movements of the head of the sperm cell. The model‌ also accounts for the complex fluid mechanics around the sperm cell as it moves.

Video ​of a new mathematical model that predicts that mammalian sperm cells have two distinct swimming ⁣modes.‍ This prediction opens new questions about⁣ potential connections between sperm cells’ motor activity and ‌their transitions to hyperactivation phases that may play an important role in fertilization. ​The⁢ finding ⁢is‌ part of a⁣ larger effort to use‍ math⁤ and fluid dynamics to describe how ‌mammalian sperm move. ‍The research is ‌led by a team of engineers ‌at the University of California San Diego. The new work was published in​ the‌ journal Physical‍ Review Fluids⁤ on 15 November, 2023. Credit: UC San Diego / David Saintillan

This new model ⁢predicts that the swimming ​speed of a ‌mammalian sperm cell does not​ simply increase‍ as its chemical motors’ activity increases. Instead, as the motor activity ⁤of a swimming sperm cell increases,⁣ this motor activity ‍passes a ⁤threshold level at which point⁣ a‌ second, distinct ⁤swimming mode emerges. It is this second mode that could potentially ⁢be linked to sperm ⁤hyperactivation.

2023-11-06 19:41:02
Article from phys.org

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