Life emerged on Earth some 3.8 billion years ago. The “primordial soup theory” proposes that chemicals floating in pools of water, in the presence of sunlight and electrical discharge, spontaneously formed organic molecules. These building blocks of life underwent chemical reactions, likely driven by RNA, eventually leading to the formation of single cells. But what sparked single cells to assemble into more complex, multicellular life forms? Prof. Shashank Shekhar and collaborators tackles some of these questions in a new Nature Physics paper focused on the fluid dynamics of cooperative feeding. Shekhar got the idea while watching the filter feeding of stentors — trumpet-shaped, single-celled giants that float near the surface of ponds. Through microscope video, he captured the fluid dynamics of a stentor in a liquid-filled lab dish as the organism sucked in particles suspended in the liquid. He also recorded the fluid dynamics of pairs and groups of stentors clumped together and feeding. Shekhar and his colleagues discovered that grouping together benefits a stentor colony as a whole by generating more powerful flows to sweep in more food from a greater distance away. The stentor’s multicellular-like behavior could be used as a model system to help understand how life evolved from single-cell organisms to complex organisms like humans — made up of trillions of cells with specialized tasks. Read the full story here:
https://news.emory.edu/features/2025/03/esc_multicellular_life_31-03-2025/index.html
And see the story in the New York Times:
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/31/science/stentors-cells-evolution-physics.html?unlocked_article_code=1.8E4.ZfXi.IDcy0FOfD6I-