12 research outputs found

    Biophysical Journal

    No full text
    Univ Fed Sao Paulo, Biophys, Sao Paulo, BrazilUniv Fed Sao Paulo, Hematol & Hemotherapy, Sao Paulo, BrazilUniv Estadual Campinas, Biochem, Campinas, SP, BrazilMax Planck Inst Colloids & Interfaces, Theory & Biosyst, Potsdam, GermanyUniv Fed Sao Paulo, Biophys, Sao Paulo, BrazilUniv Fed Sao Paulo, Hematol & Hemotherapy, Sao Paulo, BrazilWeb of Scienc

    Composition dependence of vesicle morphology and mixing properties in a bacterial model membrane system

    No full text
    AbstractWe have determined the mixing properties and lamellar organization of bacterial membrane mimetics composed of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-phosphatidylethanolamine (POPE) and -phosphatidylglycerol (POPG) at various molar ratios applying differential scanning calorimetry, small and wide-angle X-ray scattering, as well as optical phase contrast microscopy. Combining the experimental thermodynamic data with a simulation of the liquidus and solidus lines, we were able to construct a phase diagram. Using this approach, we find that the lipids mix in all phases non-ideally in the thermodynamic sense. As expected, pure POPE assembles into multilamellar and pure POPG into unilamellar vesicles, respectively, which are stable within the studied temperature range. In contrast, mixtures of the two components form oligolamellar vesicles consisting of about three to five bilayers. The layers within these oligolamellar liposomes are positionally correlated within the gel phase, but become uncorrelated within the fluid phase exhibiting freely fluctuating bilayers, while the vesicles as a whole remain intact and do not break up into unilamellar forms. X-ray, as well as DSC data, respectively, reveal a miscibility gap due to a lateral phase segregation at POPG concentrations above about 70 mol%, similar to previously reported data on mixtures composed of disaturated PEs and PGs. Hence, the existence of a region of immiscibility is a general feature of PE/PG mixtures and the mixing properties are dominated by PE/PG headgroup interactions, but are largely independent of the composition of the hydrocarbon chains. This is in accordance with a recent theoretical prediction

    Time scales of membrane fusion revealed by direct imaging of vesicle fusion with high temporal resolution

    No full text
    Membrane fusion is a vital process of life involved, for example, in cellular secretion via exocytosis, signaling between nerve cells, and virus infection. In both the life sciences and bioengineering, controlled membrane fusion has many possible applications, such as drug delivery, gene transfer, chemical microreactors, or synthesis of nanomaterials. Until now, the fusion dynamics has been elusive because direct observations have been limited to time scales that exceed several milliseconds. Here, the fusion of giant lipid vesicles is induced in a controlled manner and monitored with a temporal resolution of 50 μs. Two different fusion protocols are used that are based on synthetic fusogenic molecules and electroporation. For both protocols, the opening of the fusion necks is very fast, with an average expansion velocity of centimeters per second. This velocity indicates that the initial formation of a single fusion neck can be completed in a few hundred nanoseconds

    Impact of external medium conductivity on cell membrane electropermeabilization by microsecond and nanosecond electric pulses

    Get PDF
    The impact of external medium conductivity on the efficiency of the reversible permeabilisation caused by pulsed electric fields was investigated. Pulses of 12 ns, 102 ns or 100 μs were investigated. Whenever permeabilisation could be detected after the delivery of one single pulse, media of lower conductivity induced more efficient reversible permeabilisation and thus independently of the medium composition. Effect of medium conductivity can however be hidden by some saturation effects, for example when pulses are cumulated (use of trains of 8 pulses) or when the detection method is not sensitive enough. This explains the contradicting results that can be found in the literature. The new data are complementary to those of one of our previous study in which an opposite effect of the conductivity was highlighted. It stresses that the conductivity of the medium influences the reversible permeabilization by several ways. Moreover, these results clearly indicate that electropermeabilisation does not linearly depend on the energy delivered to the cells
    corecore