2 research outputs found
Preservation of Supported Lipid Membrane Integrity from Thermal Disruption: Osmotic Effect
Preservation
of structural integrity under various environmental conditions is
one major concern in the development of the supported lipid membrane
(SLM)-based devices. It is common for SLMs to experience temperature
shifts from manufacture, processing, storage, and transport to operation.
In this work, we studied the thermal adaption of the supported membranes
on silica substrates. Homogenous SLMs with little defects were formed
through the vesicle fusion method. The mass and fluidity of the bilayers
were found to deteriorate from a heating process but not a cooling
process. Fluorescence characterizations showed that the membranes
initially budded as a result of heating-induced lipid lateral area
expansion, followed by the possible fates including maintenance, retraction,
and fission, among which the last contributes to the irreversible
compromise of the SLM integrity and spontaneous release of the interlipid
stress accumulated. Based on the mechanism, we developed a strategy
to protect SLMs from thermal disruption by increasing the solute concentration
in medium. An improved preservation of the membrane mass and fluidity
against the heating process was observed, accompanied by a decrease
in the retraction and fission of the buds. Theoretical analysis revealed
a high osmotic energy penalty for the fission, which accounts for
the depressed disruption. This osmotic-based protection strategy is
facile, solute nonspecific, and long-term efficient and has little
impact on the original SLM properties. The results may help broaden
SLM applications and sustain the robustness of SLM-based devices under
multiple thermal conditions
Effect of Osmotic Stress on Membrane Fusion on Solid Substrate
There is currently
a lack of comprehensive understanding of osmotic
effect on lipid vesicle fusion on solid oxide surface. The question
has both biological and biomedical implications. We studied the effect
by quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring using NaCl,
sucrose as osmolytes, and two different osmotic stress imposition
methods, which allowed us to separate the osmotic effects from the
solute impacts. Osmotic stress was found to have limited influence
on the fusion kinetics, independently of the direction of the gradient.
Further atomic force microscopy experiments and energy consideration
implied that osmotic stress spends the majority of chemical potential
energy associated in directed transport of water across membrane.
Its contribution to vesicle deformation and fusion on substrate is
therefore small compared to that of adhesion