Literature DB >> 17824630

The adhesion kinetics of sticky vesicles in tension: the distinction between spreading and receptor binding.

Jin Nam1, Maria M Santore.   

Abstract

We investigate the kinetics of spreading and adhesion between polymer vesicles decorated with avidin and biotin, held in micropipettes to maintain fixed tension and suppress membrane bending fluctuations. In this study, the density of avidin (actually Neutravidin) and biotin was varied, but was always sufficiently high so that lateral diffusion in the membrane was unimportant to the adhesive mechanism or rate. For a stunning result, we report a concentration-dependent distinction between adhesion and spreading: At low surface densities of avidin and biotin, irreversible vesicle adhesion is strong enough to break the membrane when vesicle separation is attempted, yet there is no spreading or "wetting". By this we mean that there is no development of an adhesion plaque beyond the initial radius of contact and there is no development of a meaningful contact angle. Conversely, at 30% functionalization and greater, membrane adhesion is manifest through a spreading process in which the vesicle held at lower tension partially engulfs the second vesicle, and the adhesion plaque grows, as does the contact angle. Generally, when spreading occurs, it starts abruptly, following a latent contact period whose duration decreases with increasing membrane functionality. A nucleation-type rate law describes the latency period, determined by competition between bending and sticking energy. The significance of this result is that, not only are membrane mechanics important to the development of adhesion in membranes of nanometer-scale thickness, mechanics can dominate and even mask adhesive features such as contact angle. This renders contact angle analyses inappropriate for some systems. The results also suggest that there exist large regions of parameter space where adhesive polymeric vesicles will behave qualitatively differently from their phospholipid counterparts. This motivates different strategies to design polymeric vesicles for applications such as targeted drug delivery and biomimetic scavengers.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17824630     DOI: 10.1021/la7017709

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Langmuir        ISSN: 0743-7463            Impact factor:   3.882


  4 in total

1.  Adhesive interactions between vesicles in the strong adhesion limit.

Authors:  Arun Ramachandran; Travers H Anderson; L Gary Leal; Jacob N Israelachvili
Journal:  Langmuir       Date:  2010-12-03       Impact factor: 3.882

2.  Ligand conjugation to bimodal poly(ethylene glycol) brush layers on microbubbles.

Authors:  Cherry C Chen; Mark A Borden
Journal:  Langmuir       Date:  2010-08-17       Impact factor: 3.882

3.  Peeling dynamics of fluid membranes bridged by molecular bonds: moving or breaking.

Authors:  Dimitri Kaurin; Pradeep K Bal; Marino Arroyo
Journal:  J R Soc Interface       Date:  2022-06-29       Impact factor: 4.293

Review 4.  Polymersome carriers: from self-assembly to siRNA and protein therapeutics.

Authors:  David A Christian; Shenshen Cai; Diana M Bowen; Younghoon Kim; J David Pajerowski; Dennis E Discher
Journal:  Eur J Pharm Biopharm       Date:  2008-10-17       Impact factor: 5.571

  4 in total

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