Ivane Jorjadze
New York University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ivane Jorjadze.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Lea-Laetitia Pontani; Ivane Jorjadze; Virgile Viasnoff; Jasna Brujic
Cell–cell contacts in tissues are continuously subject to mechanical forces due to homeostatic pressure and active cytoskeleton dynamics. In the process of cellular adhesion, the molecular pathways are well characterized but the role of mechanics is less well understood. To isolate the role of pressure we present a dense packing of functionalized emulsion droplets in which surface interactions are tuned to mimic those of real cells. By visualizing the microstructure in 3D we find that a threshold compression force is necessary to overcome electrostatic repulsion and surface elasticity and establish protein-mediated adhesion. Varying the droplet interaction potential maps out a phase diagram for adhesion as a function of force and salt concentration. Remarkably, fitting the data with our theoretical model predicts binder concentrations in the adhesion areas that are similar to those found in real cells. Moreover, we quantify the dependence of the area of adhesion on the applied force and thus reveal adhesion strengthening with increasing external pressure even in the absence of active cellular processes. This biomimetic approach reveals a physical origin of pressure-sensitive adhesion and its strength across cell–cell junctions.
Physical Review Letters | 2013
Ivane Jorjadze; Lea-Laetitia Pontani; Jasna Brujic
Using confocal microscopy, we measure the packing geometry and interdroplet forces as a function of the osmotic pressure in a 3D emulsion system. We assume a harmonic interaction potential over a wide range of volume fractions and attribute the observed nonlinear elastic response of the pressure with density to the first corrections to the scaling laws of the microstructure away from the critical point. The bulk modulus depends on the excess contacts created under compression, which leads to the correction exponent α=1.5. Microscopically, the nonlinearities manifest themselves as a narrowing of the distribution of the pressure per particle as a function of the global pressure.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011
Ivane Jorjadze; Lea-Laetitia Pontani; Katherine A. Newhall; Jasna Brujic
It remains an open question whether statistical mechanics approaches apply to random packings of athermal particles. Although a jamming phase diagram has recently been proposed for hard spheres with varying friction, here we use a frictionless emulsion system in the presence of depletion forces to sample the available phase space of packing configurations. Using confocal microscopy, we access their packing microstructure and test the theoretical assumptions. As a function of attraction, our packing protocol under gravity leads to well-defined jammed structures in which global density initially increases above random close packing and subsequently decreases monotonically. Microscopically, the fluctuations in parameters describing each particle, such as the coordination number, number of neighbors, and local packing fraction, are for all attractions in excellent agreement with a local stochastic model, indicating that long-range correlations are not important. Furthermore, the distributions of local cell volumes can be collapsed onto a universal curve using the predicted k-gamma distribution, in which the shape parameter k is fixed by the polydispersity while the effect of attraction is captured by rescaling the average cell volume. Within the Edwards statistical mechanics framework, this result measures the decrease in compactivity with global density, which represents a direct experimental test of a jamming phase diagram in athermal systems. The success of these theoretical tools in describing yet another class of materials gives support to the much-debated statistical physics of jammed granular matter.
Physical Review Letters | 2016
Jie Lin; Ivane Jorjadze; Lea-Laetitia Pontani; Matthieu Wyart; Jasna Brujic
We report the first measurements of the effect of pressure on vibrational modes in emulsions, which serve as a model for soft frictionless spheres at zero temperature. As a function of the applied pressure, we find that the density of states D(ω) exhibits a low-frequency cutoff ω^{*}, which scales linearly with the number of extra contacts per particle δz. Moreover, for ω<ω^{*}, our results are consistent with D(ω)∼ω^{2}/ω^{*2}, a quadratic behavior whose prefactor is larger than what is expected from Debye theory. This surprising result agrees with recent theoretical findings [E. DeGiuli, A. Laversanne-Finot, G. A. Düring, E. Lerner, and M. Wyart, Soft Matter 10, 5628 (2014); S. Franz, G. Parisi, P. Urbani, and F. Zamponi, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 112, 14539 (2015)]. Finally, the degree of localization of the softest low frequency modes increases with compression, as shown by the participation ratio as well as their spatial configurations. Overall, our observations show that emulsions are marginally stable and display non-plane-wave modes up to vanishing frequencies.
Soft Matter | 2011
Katherine A. Newhall; Ivane Jorjadze; Eric Vanden-Eijnden; Jasna Brujic
Physical Review Letters | 2012
Katherine A. Newhall; Lea-Laetitia Pontani; Ivane Jorjadze; Sascha Hilgenfeldt; Jasna Brujic
Biophysical Journal | 2016
Lea-Laetitia Pontani; Ivane Jorjadze; Jasna Brujic
arXiv: Biological Physics | 2012
Katherine A. Newhall; Ivane Jorjadze; Eric Vanden-Eijnden; Jasna Brujic
Biophysical Journal | 2013
Lea-Laetitia Pontani; Ivane Jorjadze; Virgile Viasnoff; Jasna Brujic
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2012
Ivane Jorjadze; Jasna Brujic