5 research outputs found
Movie 03 from Plant-inspired pipettes
Successful grabbing of olive oil during a fast withdrawal
Movie 01 from Plant-inspired pipettes
Successful grabbing of water during a fast withdrawa
Movie 02 from Plant-inspired pipettes
Successful grabbing of water during a slow withdrawa
Movie 4 from Plant-inspired pipettes
Successful grabbing of olive oil during a slow withdrawa
Combination of MD Simulations with Two-State Kinetic Rate Modeling Elucidates the Chain Melting Transition of Phospholipid Bilayers for Different Hydration Levels
The
phase behavior of membrane lipids plays an important role in
the formation of functional domains in biological membranes and crucially
affects molecular transport through lipid layers, for instance, in
the skin. We investigate the thermotropic chain melting transition
from the ordered <i>L</i><sub>β</sub> phase to the
disordered <i>L</i><sub>α</sub> phase in membranes
composed of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine (DPPC) by atomistic molecular
dynamics simulations in which the membranes are subject to variable
heating rates. We find that the transition is initiated by a localized
nucleus and followed by the propagation of the phase boundary. A two-state
kinetic rate model allows characterizing the transition state in terms
of thermodynamic quantities such as transition state enthalpy and
entropy. The extrapolated equilibrium melting temperature increases
with reduced membrane hydration and thus in tendency reproduces the
experimentally observed dependence on dehydrating osmotic stress