I did a double take when I read the title of the paper: "Ultrafast reversible self-assembly of living tangled matter"
Then I did another (a triple take?) when I saw the video. https://arxiv.org/abs/2210.03384
#Biology #LifeFindsAWay
Ultrafast reversible self-assembly of living tangled matter

Tangled active filaments are ubiquitous in nature, from chromosomal DNA and cilia carpets to root networks and worm blobs. How activity and elasticity facilitate collective topological transformations in living tangled matter is not well understood. Here, we report an experimental and theoretical study of California blackworms (Lumbriculus variegatus), which slowly form tangles over minutes but can untangle in milliseconds. Combining ultrasound imaging, theoretical analysis and simulations, we develop and validate a mechanistic model that explains how the kinematics of individual active filaments determines their emergent collective topological dynamics. The model reveals that resonantly alternating helical waves enable both tangle formation and ultrafast untangling. By identifying generic dynamical principles of topological self-transformations, our results can provide guidance for designing new classes of topologically tunable active materials.

arXiv.org

California blackworms from complex tangles but can then untangle themselves in milliseconds! Fascinating thread on how they do it, by the researcher studying them:

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RT @BhamlaLab
Excited for our paper out today in Science that shows how worms untangle complex topological knots https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.ade7759

Brief thread below👇
Work co-led by Vishal Patil and @TuazonHarry, and many other team members including Jor…
https://twitter.com/BhamlaLab/status/1651652023941742592

I want a biomimetic headphone cord that can detangle itself like this. (What can I say, I'm not a Bluetooth guy.)
HT @BhamlaLab @TuazonHarry and #Worms
When I think of tangled headphone cords, my brain goes to this classic Jeff Goldblum bit from Portlandia. What a delicious bit of deadpan. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NfLu7GRMR7g
Portlandia - The Knot Store

YouTube
@coreyspowell "this is so useful but also now I have so many nightmares"
@spacegeck I feel like that cuts to the heart of so much biology research.
@coreyspowell "Tangled active filaments are ubiquitous in nature, from chromosomal DNA and cilia carpets to root networks and worm blobs." Ohhhhhhhhhhh