4 research outputs found
Antivesiculation and Complete Unbinding of Tail-Tethered Lipids
We report the effect of tail-tethering on vesiculation
and complete
unbinding of bilayered membranes.
Amphiphilic molecules of a bolalipid, resembling the tail-tethered
molecular structure of archaeal lipids, with two identical zwitterionic
phosphatidylcholine headgroups self-assemble into a large flat lamellar
membrane, in contrast to the multilamellar vesicles (MLVs) observed
in its counterpart, monopolar nontethered zwitterionic lipids. The
antivesiculation is confirmed by small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS)
and cryogenic transmission electron microscopy (cyro-TEM). With the
net charge of zero and higher bending rigidity of the membrane (confirmed
by neutron spin echo (NSE) spectroscopy), the current membrane theory
would predict that membranes should stack with each other (aka “bind”)
due to dominant van der Waals attraction, while the outcome of the
nonstacking (“unbinding”) membrane suggests that the
theory needs to include entropic contribution for the nonvesicular
structures. This report pioneers an understanding of how the tail-tethering
of amphiphiles affects the structure, enabling better control over
the final nanoscale morphology