Researcher profile

Winfried Schmidt

Winfried Schmidt contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Amoeboid cell migration and shape dynamics driven by actin polymerization

Cell migration is fundamental to development, tissue organization, immune response, and disease progression. Amoeboid motility is distinguished by rapid motion and strongly fluctuating cell shapes, reflecting the intrinsically nonlinear nature of active living matter far from equilibrium. Here we introduce a minimal active-shell model of an amoeboid cell that couples actin polymerization, cortical flows, and membrane deformation through nonlocal mechanical interactions. The model gives rise to a rich spectrum of emergent behaviors. A symmetric non-motile state can spontaneously break symmetry and transition toward persistent directed migration driven solely by polymerization-induced retrograde flow, even in the absence of shape deformation. Increasing activity further triggers a cascade of dynamical states, including circular trajectories, oscillatory zigzag motion, and irregular chaotic-like migration with fluctuating protrusions and multi-lobed morphologies. Although these migratory modes are observed experimentally in distinct cellular contexts, our results show that they can emerge from the same underlying physical mechanism, providing a unified framework for amoeboid dynamics. Notably, contractile stresses induced by molecular motors are not required to generate spontaneous motility, polarity, or complex migration patterns. Our findings highlight how collective active processes at the cellular scale can self-organize into complex dynamical states, revealing generic principles of nonlinear behavior in living systems.

preprint2022arXiv

Suppression of bacterial rheotaxis in wavy channels

Controlling the swimming behavior of bacteria is crucial, for example, to prevent contamination of ducts and catheters. We show the bacteria modeled by deformable microswimmers can accumulate in flows through straight microchannels either in their center or on previously unknown attractors near the channel walls. We predict a novel resonance effect for semiflexible microswimmers in flows through wavy microchannels. As a result, microswimmers can be deflected in a controlled manner so that they swim in modulated channels distributed over the channel cross-section rather than localized near the wall or the channel center. Thus, depending on the flow amplitude, both upstream orientation of swimmers and their accumulation at the boundaries which can lead to surface rheotaxis are suppressed. Our results suggest new strategies for controlling the behavior of live and synthetic swimmers in microchannels.