Lithographically
Defined Macroscale Modulation of
Lateral Fluidity and Phase Separation Realized via Patterned Nanoporous
Silica-Supported Phospholipid Bilayers
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Abstract
Using lithographically
defined surfaces consisting of hydrophilic
patterns of nanoporous and nonporous (bulk) amorphous silica, we show
that fusion of small, unilamellar lipid vesicles produces a single,
contiguous, fluid bilayer phase experiencing a predetermined pattern
of interfacial interactions. Although long-range lateral fluidity
of the bilayer, characterized by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching,
indicates a nominally single average diffusion constant, fluorescence
microscopy-based measurements of temperature-dependent onset of fluidity
reveals a locally enhanced fluidity for bilayer regions supported
on nanoporous silica in the vicinity of the fluid–gel transition
temperature. Furthermore, thermally quenching lipid bilayers composed
of a binary lipid mixture below its apparent miscibility transition
temperature induces qualitatively different lateral phase separation
in each region of the supported bilayer: The nanoporous substrate
produces large, microscopic domains (and domain-aggregates), whereas
surface texture characterized by much smaller domains and devoid of
any domain-aggregates appears on bulk glass-supported regions of the
single-lipid bilayer. Interestingly, lateral distribution of the constituent
molecules also reveals an enrichment of gel-phase lipids over nanoporous
regions, presumably as a consequence of differential mobilities of
constituent lipids across the topographic bulk/nanoporous boundary.
Together, these results reveal that subtle local variations in constraints
imposed at the bilayer interface, such as by spatial variations in
roughness and substrate adhesion, can give rise to significant differences
in macroscale biophysical properties of phospholipid bilayers even
within a single, contiguous phase