Date
Thu, 04 Nov 2021
Time
12:00 - 13:00
Location
L3
Speaker
Mike Shelley
Organisation
Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences

The organized movement of intracellular material is part of the functioning of cells and the development of organisms. These flows can arise from the action of molecular machines on the flexible, and often transitory, scaffoldings of the cell. Understanding phenomena in this realm has necessitated the development of new simulation tools, and of new coarse-grained mathematical models to analyze and simulate. In that context, I'll discuss how a symmetry-breaking "swirling" instability of a motor-laden cytoskeleton may be an important part of the development of an oocyte, modeling active material in the spindle, and what models of active, immersed polymers tell us about chromatin dynamics in the nucleus.

Further Information

Mike Shelley is Lilian and George Lyttle Professor of Applied Mathematics & Professor of Mathematics, Neural Science, and Mechanical Engineering, and Co-Director of the Applied Mathematics Laboratory. He is also Director of the Center for Computational Biology, and Group Leader of Biophysical ModelingThe Flatiron Institute, Simons Foundation
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