Membrane-mediated interactions measured using membrane domains

Journal Article (2009)
Author(s)

Stefan Semrau (Universiteit Leiden)

T. Idema (Universiteit Leiden)

Thomas Schmidt (Universiteit Leiden)

C. Storm (Universiteit Leiden, Eindhoven University of Technology)

Affiliation
External organisation
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bpj.2009.03.050
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Publication Year
2009
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
Issue number
12
Volume number
96
Pages (from-to)
4906-4915

Abstract

Cell membrane organization is the result of the collective effect of many driving forces. Several of these, such as electrostatic and van der Waals forces, have been identified and studied in detail. In this article, we investigate and quantify another force, the interaction between inclusions via deformations of the membrane shape. For electrically neutral systems, this interaction is the dominant organizing force. As a model system to study membrane-mediated interactions, we use phase-separated biomimetic vesicles that exhibit coexistence of liquid-ordered and liquid-disordered lipid domains. The membrane-mediated interactions between these domains lead to a rich variety of effects, including the creation of long-range order and the setting of a preferred domain size. Our findings also apply to the interaction of membrane protein patches, which induce similar membrane shape deformations and hence experience similar interactions.

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