Literature DB >> 26866787

Mixing Water, Transducing Energy, and Shaping Membranes: Autonomously Self-Regulating Giant Vesicles.

James C S Ho1, Padmini Rangamani2, Bo Liedberg1, Atul N Parikh1,3.   

Abstract

Giant lipid vesicles are topologically closed compartments bounded by semipermeable flexible shells, which isolate femto- to picoliter quantities of the aqueous core from the surrounding bulk. Although water equilibrates readily across vesicular walls (10(-2)-10(-3) cm(3) cm(-2) s(-1)), the passive permeation of solutes is strongly hindered. Furthermore, because of their large volume compressibility (∼10(9)-10(10) N m(-2)) and area expansion (10(2)-10(3) mN m(-1)) moduli, coupled with low bending rigidities (10(-19) N m), vesicular shells bend readily but resist volume compression and tolerate only a limited area expansion (∼5%). Consequently, vesicles experiencing solute concentration gradients dissipate the available chemical energy through the osmotic movement of water, producing dramatic shape transformations driven by surface-area-volume changes and sustained by the incompressibility of water and the flexible membrane interface. Upon immersion in a hypertonic bath, an increased surface-area-volume ratio promotes large-scale morphological remodeling, reducing symmetry and stabilizing unusual shapes determined, at equilibrium, by the minimal bending-energy configurations. By contrast, when subjected to a hypotonic bath, walls of giant vesicles lose their thermal undulation, accumulate mechanical tension, and, beyond a threshold swelling, exhibit remarkable oscillatory swell-burst cycles, with the latter characterized by damped, periodic oscillations in vesicle size, membrane tension, and phase behavior. This cyclical pattern of the osmotic influx of water, pressure, membrane tension, pore formation, and solute efflux suggests quasi-homeostatic self-regulatory behavior allowing vesicular compartments produced from simple molecular components, namely, water, osmolytes, and lipids, to sense and regulate their microenvironment in a negative feedback loop.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 26866787     DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.5b04470

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


  16 in total

1.  Pulsatile Lipid Vesicles under Osmotic Stress.

Authors:  Morgan Chabanon; James C S Ho; Bo Liedberg; Atul N Parikh; Padmini Rangamani
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2017-04-25       Impact factor: 4.033

2.  A Chalcogen-Bonding Cascade Switch for Planarizable Push-Pull Probes.

Authors:  Mariano Macchione; Antoine Goujon; Karolina Strakova; Heorhii V Humeniuk; Giuseppe Licari; Emad Tajkhorshid; Naomi Sakai; Stefan Matile
Journal:  Angew Chem Int Ed Engl       Date:  2019-09-20       Impact factor: 15.336

3.  Experimental Estimation of Membrane Tension Induced by Osmotic Pressure.

Authors:  Sayed Ul Alam Shibly; Chiranjib Ghatak; Mohammad Abu Sayem Karal; Md Moniruzzaman; Masahito Yamazaki
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2016-11-15       Impact factor: 4.033

Review 4.  Plant cell polarity as the nexus of tissue mechanics and morphogenesis.

Authors:  Vera Gorelova; Joris Sprakel; Dolf Weijers
Journal:  Nat Plants       Date:  2021-12-09       Impact factor: 17.352

5.  Cyclic Activity of an Osmotically Stressed Liposome in a Finite Hypotonic Environment.

Authors:  Ali Imran; Dumitru Popescu; Liviu Movileanu
Journal:  Langmuir       Date:  2020-03-30       Impact factor: 3.882

6.  Framing major prebiotic transitions as stages of protocell development: three challenges for origins-of-life research.

Authors:  Ben Shirt-Ediss; Sara Murillo-Sánchez; Kepa Ruiz-Mirazo
Journal:  Beilstein J Org Chem       Date:  2017-07-13       Impact factor: 2.883

7.  Curvature-Induced Spatial Ordering of Composition in Lipid Membranes.

Authors:  Shimrit Katz; Sefi Givli
Journal:  Comput Math Methods Med       Date:  2017-04-04       Impact factor: 2.238

8.  The Pearling Transition Provides Evidence of Force-Driven Endosomal Tubulation during Salmonella Infection.

Authors:  Yunfeng Gao; Christoph Spahn; Mike Heilemann; Linda J Kenney
Journal:  MBio       Date:  2018-06-19       Impact factor: 7.867

9.  Imaging non-classical mechanical responses of lipid membranes using molecular rotors.

Authors:  Miguel Páez-Pérez; Ismael López-Duarte; Aurimas Vyšniauskas; Nicholas J Brooks; Marina K Kuimova
Journal:  Chem Sci       Date:  2020-12-22       Impact factor: 9.825

Review 10.  The hallmarks of living systems: towards creating artificial cells.

Authors:  N Amy Yewdall; Alexander F Mason; Jan C M van Hest
Journal:  Interface Focus       Date:  2018-08-17       Impact factor: 3.906

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