Investigating Hydrophilic Pores in Model Lipid Bilayers
Using Molecular Simulations: Correlating Bilayer Properties with Pore-Formation
Thermodynamics
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Abstract
Cell-penetrating
and antimicrobial peptides show a remarkable ability
to translocate across physiological membranes. Along with factors
such as electric-potential-induced perturbations of membrane structure
and surface tension effects, experiments invoke porelike membrane
configurations during the solute transfer process into vesicles and
cells. The initiation and formation of pores are associated with a
nontrivial free-energy cost, thus necessitating a consideration of
the factors associated with pore formation and the attendant free
energies. Because of experimental and modeling challenges related
to the long time scales of the translocation process, we use umbrella
sampling molecular dynamics simulations with a lipid-density-based
order parameter to investigate membrane-pore-formation free energy
employing Martini coarse-grained models. We investigate structure
and thermodynamic features of the pore in 18 lipids spanning a range
of headgroups, charge states, acyl chain lengths, and saturation.
We probe the dependence of pore-formation barriers on the area per
lipid, lipid bilayer thickness, and membrane bending rigidities in
three different lipid classes. The pore-formation free energy in pure
bilayers and peptide translocating scenarios are significantly coupled
with bilayer thickness. Thicker bilayers require more reversible work
to create pores. The pore-formation free energy is higher in peptide–lipid
systems than in peptide-free lipid systems due to penalties to maintain
the solvation of charged hydrophilic solutes within the membrane environment