Literature DB >> 26340300

New Insights into the Growth and Transformation of Vesicles: A Free-Flow Electrophoresis Study.

Tereza Pereira de Souza1, Martin Holzer2, Pasquale Stano3, Frank Steiniger4, Sylvio May5, Rolf Schubert2, Alfred Fahr1, Pier Luigi Luisi3.   

Abstract

The spontaneous formation of lipid vesicles, in particular fatty acid vesicles, is considered an important physical process at the roots of cellular life. It has been demonstrated previously that the addition of fatty acid micelles to preformed vesicles induces vesicle self-reproduction by a growth-division mechanism. Despite multiple experimental efforts, it remains unresolved how vesicles rearrange upon the addition of fresh membrane-forming compounds, and whether solutes that are initially encapsulated inside the mother vesicles are evenly redistributed among the daughter ones. Here we investigate the growth-division of 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) vesicles, which, following the addition of oleate micelles, form mixed oleate/POPC vesicles. Our approach is based on free-flow electrophoresis (FFE) and cryogenic transmission electronmicroscopy (cryo-TEM). Two new features emerge from this study. FFE analysis unexpectedly reveals that the uptake of oleate micelles by POPC vesicles follows two different pathways depending on the micelles/vesicles ratio. At low oleate molar fractions (<0.35), plain incorporation of oleate into pre-existing POPC vesicles is our dominant observation. In contrast, oleate-rich and oleate-poor daughter vesicles are generated from parent POPC vesicles when the oleate molar fraction exceeds 0.35. Cryo-TEM reveals that when ferritin-filled vesicles grow and divide, some vesicles contain ferritin at increased concentrations, others are empty. Intriguingly, in some cases, ferritin appears to be highly concentrated inside the vesicles. These observations imply a specific redistribution (partitioning) of encapsulated solutes among nascent vesicles during the growth-division steps. We have interpreted our observations by assuming that freshly added oleate molecules are taken-up preferentially (cooperatively) by oleate-rich membrane regions that form spontaneously in POPC/oleate vesicles when a certain threshold (oleate molar fraction ca. 0.35) is surpassed. The proposed cooperative mechanism could be based on differential microscopic constants for oleate/oleic acid dynamics in oleate-rich and oleate-poor membrane regions, which eventually generate populations of oleate-rich and oleate-poor vesicles.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26340300     DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.5b05057

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Phys Chem B        ISSN: 1520-5207            Impact factor:   2.991


  3 in total

1.  Visualization of the spontaneous emergence of a complex, dynamic, and autocatalytic system.

Authors:  Jaime Ortega-Arroyo; Andrew J Bissette; Philipp Kukura; Stephen P Fletcher
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2016-09-16       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Dynamics of the vesicles composed of fatty acids and other amphiphile mixtures: unveiling the role of fatty acids as a model protocell membrane.

Authors:  Niloy Kundu; Dipankar Mondal; Nilmoni Sarkar
Journal:  Biophys Rev       Date:  2020-09-14

Review 3.  Investigating Prebiotic Protocells for A Comprehensive Understanding of the Origins of Life: A Prebiotic Systems Chemistry Perspective.

Authors:  Augustin Lopez; Michele Fiore
Journal:  Life (Basel)       Date:  2019-06-07
  3 in total

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