54 research outputs found

    Diffusion in low-dimensional lipid membranes

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    The diffusion behavior of biological components in cellular membranes is vital to the function of cells. By collapsing the complexity of planar 2D membranes down to one dimension, fundamental investigations of bimolecular behavior become possible in one dimension. Here we develop lipid nanolithography methods to produce membranes, under fluid, with widths as low as 6 nm but extending to microns in length. We find reduced lipid mobility, as the width is reduced below 50 nm, suggesting different lipid packing in the vicinity of boundaries. The insertion of a membrane protein, M2, into these systems, allowed characterization of protein diffusion using high-speed AFM to demonstrate the first membrane protein 1D random walk. These quasi-1D lipid bilayers are ideal for testing and understanding fundamental concepts about the roles of dimensionality and size on physical properties of membranes from energy transfer to lipid packing

    Programmed Bending Reveals Dynamic Mechanochemical Coupling in Supported Lipid Bilayers

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    In living cells, mechanochemical coupling represents a dynamic means by which membrane components are spatially organized. An extra-ordinary example of such coupling involves curvature-dependent polar localization of chemically-distinct lipid domains at bacterial poles, which also undergo dramatic reequilibration upon subtle changes in their interfacial environment such as during sporulation. Here, we demonstrate that such interfacially-triggered mechanochemical coupling can be recapitulated in vitro by simultaneous, real-time introduction of mechanically-generated periodic curvatures and attendant strain-induced lateral forces in lipid bilayers supported on elastomeric substrates. In particular, we show that real-time wrinkling of the elastomeric substrate prompts a dynamic domain reorganization within the adhering bilayer, producing large, oriented liquid-ordered domains in regions of low curvature. Our results suggest a mechanism in which interfacial forces generated during surface wrinkling and the topographical deformation of the bilayer combine to facilitate dynamic reequilibration prompting the observed domain reorganization. We anticipate this curvature-generating model system will prove to be a simple and versatile tool for a broad range of studies of curvature-dependent dynamic reorganizations in membranes that are constrained by the interfacial elastic and dynamic frameworks such as the cell wall, glycocalyx, and cytoskeleton
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