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1.
We recently introduced a method to tether intact phospholipid vesicles onto a fluid supported lipid bilayer using DNA hybridization (Yoshina-Ishii, C.; Miller, G. P.; Kraft, M. L; Kool, E. T.; Boxer, S. G. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2005, 127, 1356-1357). Once tethered, the vesicles can diffuse in two dimensions parallel to the supported membrane surface. The average diffusion coefficient, D, is typically 0.2 microm(2)/s; this is 3-5 times smaller than for individual lipid or DNA-lipid conjugate diffusion in supported bilayers. In this article, we investigate the origin of this difference in the diffusive dynamics of tethered vesicles by single-particle tracking under collision-free conditions. D is insensitive to tethered vesicle size from 30 to 200 nm, as well as a 3-fold change in the viscosity of the bulk medium. The addition of macromolecules such as poly(ethylene glycol) reversibly stops the motion of tethered vesicles without causing the exchange of lipids between the tethered vesicle and supported bilayer. This is explained as a depletion effect at the interface between tethered vesicles and the supported bilayer. Ca ions lead to transient vesicle-vesicle interactions when tethered vesicles contain negatively charged lipids, and vesicle diffusion is greatly reduced upon Ca ion addition when negatively charged lipids are present both in the supported bilayer and tethered vesicles. Both effects are interesting in their own right, and they also suggest that tethered vesicle-supported bilayer interactions are possible; this may be the origin of the reduction in D for tethered vesicles. In addition, the effects of surface defects that reversibly trap diffusing vesicles are modeled by Monte Carlo simulations. This shows that a significant reduction in D can be observed while maintaining normal diffusion behavior on the time scale of our experiments.  相似文献   

2.
We recently introduced methods to tether phospholipid vesicles or proteoliposomes onto a fluid-supported lipid bilayer using DNA hybridization (Yoshina-Ishii, C.; Miller, G. P.; Kraft, M. L.; Kool, E. T.; Boxer, S. G. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2005, 127, 1356-1357). These intact tethered vesicles diffuse in two dimensions parallel to the supporting membrane surface. In this article, we report the dynamic response of individual tethered vesicles to an electric field applied parallel to the bilayer surface. Vesicles respond to the field by moving in the direction of electro-osmotic flow, and this can be used to reversibly concentrate tethered vesicles against a barrier. By adding increasing amounts of negatively charged phosphatidylserine to the supporting bilayer to increase electro-osmosis, the electrophoretic mobility of the tethered vesicles can be increased. The electro-osmotic contribution can be modeled well by a sphere connected to a cylindrical anchor in a viscous membrane with charged headgroups. The electrophoretic force on the negatively charged tethered vesicles opposes the electro-osmotic force. By increasing the amount of negative charge on the tethered vesicle, drift in the direction of electro-osmotic flow can be slowed; at high negative charge on the tethered vesicle, motion can be forced in the direction of electrophoresis. The balance between these forces can be visualized on a patterned supporting bilayer containing negatively charged lipids that reorganize in an externally applied electric field to create a gradient of charge within a corralled region. The charge gradient at the surface creates a gradient of electro-osmotic flow, and vesicles carrying similar amounts of negative charge can be focused to a region perpendicular to the applied field where electrophoresis is balanced by electro-osmosis, away from the corral boundary. Electric fields are effective tools to direct tethered vesicles and concentrate them and to measure the tethered vesicle's electrostatic properties.  相似文献   

3.
Lipid vesicles are designed with functional chemical groups to promote vesicle fusion on template-stripped gold (TS Au) surfaces that does not spontaneously occur on unfunctionalized Au surfaces. Three types of vesicles were exposed to TS Au surfaces: (1) vesicles composed of only 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) lipids; (2) vesicles composed of lipid mixtures of 2.5 mol % of 1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine-N-poly(ethylene glycol)-2000-N-[3-(2-pyridyldithio)propionate] (DSPE-PEG-PDP) and 97.5 mol % of POPC; and (3) vesicles composed of 2.5 mol % of 1,2-distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine-N-[methoxy(poly(ethylene glycol))-2000] (DSPE-PEG) and 97.5 mol % POPC. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) topography and force spectroscopy measurements acquired in a fluid environment confirmed tethered lipid bilayer membrane (tLBM) formation only for vesicles composed of 2.5 mol % DSPE-PEG-PDP/97.5 mol % POPC, thus indicating that the sulfur-containing PDP group is necessary to achieve tLBM formation on TS Au via Au-thiolate bonds. Analysis of force-distance curves for 2.5 mol % DSPE-PEG-PDP/97.5 mol % POPC tLBMs on TS Au yielded a breakthrough distance of 4.8 ± 0.4 nm, which is about 1.7 nm thicker than that of POPC lipid bilayer membrane formed on mica. Thus, the PEG group serves as a spacer layer between the tLBM and the TS Au surface. Fluorescence microscopy results indicate that these tLBMs also have greater mechanical stability than solid-supported lipid bilayer membranes made from the same vesicles on mica. The described process for assembling stable tLBMs on Au surfaces is compatible with microdispensing used in array fabrication.  相似文献   

4.
A mercury-supported bilayer lipid micromembrane was prepared by anchoring a thiolipid monolayer to a mercury cap electrodeposited on a platinum microdisc about 20 μm in diameter; a lipid monolayer was then self-assembled on top of the thiolipid monolayer either by vesicle fusion or by spilling a few drops of a lipid solution in chloroform on the cap and allowing the solvent to evaporate. Single-channel recording following incorporation of the alamethicin channel-forming peptide exhibits quite different features, depending on the procedure followed to form the distal lipid monolayer. The "spilling" procedure, which avoids the formation of adsorbed or partially fused vesicles, yields very sharp single-channel currents lasting only one or two milliseconds. These are ascribed to ionic flux into the hydrophilic spacer moiety of the thiolipid. Conversely, the vesicle-fusion procedure yields much longer single-channel openings analogous to those obtained with conventional bilayer lipid membranes, albeit smaller. This difference in behavior is explained by ascribing the latter single-channel currents to ionic flux into vesicles adsorbed and/or partially fused onto the tethered lipid bilayer, via capacitive coupling.  相似文献   

5.
A simple method for modifying a polymer surface to induce lipid bilayer formation by vesicle fusion is described. A silicate gel was prepared by condensation of tetraethyl orthosilicate (TEOS) in the presence of acid. When applied to a poly(methylmethacrylate) substrate, either a rough or a smooth layer could be produced, depending on the method used for the application. The smooth surface induced formation of a supported lipid bilayer by fusion of lipid vesicles; the rough silicate surface induced adsorption of a vesicle layer. A high-frequency acoustic waveguide device was used to follow the initial adsorption of vesicles, the transition from a vesicle layer to a bilayer, and the formation of a complete bilayer; the time required to form a bilayer was determined as a function of lipid concentration in suspension. The presence of a bilayer on the smooth silicate surface was confirmed by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching. An additional procedure is described to modify a gold surface to induce bilayer formation.  相似文献   

6.
A unique method is described for directly observing the lateral organization of a membrane protein (bacterial light-harvesting complex LH2) in a supported lipid bilayer using total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy. The supported lipid bilayer consisted of anionic 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-[phospho-rac-(1'-glycerol)] (DOPG) and 1,2-distearoly-sn-3-[phospho-rac-(1'-glycerol)] (DSPG) and was formed through the rupture of a giant vesicle on a positively charged coverslip. TIRF microscopy revealed that the bilayer was composed of phase-separated domains. When a suspension of cationic phospholipid (1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-ethylphosphocholine: EDOPC) vesicles (approximately 400 nm in diameter), containing LH2 complexes (EDOPC/LH2 = 1000/1), was put into contact with the supported lipid bilayer, the cationic vesicles immediately began to fuse and did so specifically with the fluid phase (DOPG-rich domain) of the supported bilayer. Fluorescence from the incorporated LH2 complexes gradually (over approximately 20 min) spread from the domain boundary into the gel domain (DSPG-rich domain). Similar diffusion into the domain-structured supported lipid membrane was observed when the fluorescent lipid (1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine-N-lissamine-rhodamine B sulfonyl: N-Rh-DOPE) was incorporated into the vesicles instead of LH2. These results indicate that vesicles containing LH2 and lipids preferentially fuse with the fluid domain, after which they laterally diffuse into the gel domain. This report describes for first time the lateral organization of a membrane protein, LH2, via vesicle fusion and subsequent lateral diffusion of the LH2 from the fluid to the gel domains in the supported lipid bilayer. The biological implications and applications of the present study are briefly discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Supported lipid platforms are versatile cell membrane mimics whose structural properties can be tailored to suit the application of interest. By identifying parameters that control the self-assembly of these platforms, there is potential to develop advanced biomimetic systems that overcome the surface specificity of lipid vesicle interactions under physiological conditions. In this work, we investigated the adsorption kinetics of vesicles onto silicon and titanium oxides as a function of pH. On each substrate, a planar bilayer and a layer of intact vesicles could be self-assembled in a pH-dependent manner, demonstrating the role of surface charge density in the self-assembly process. Under acidic pH conditions where both zwitterionic lipid vesicles and the oxide films possess near-neutral electric surface charges, vesicle rupture could occur, demonstrating that the process is driven by nonelectrostatic interactions. However, we observed that the initial rupturing process is insufficient for propagating bilayer formation. The role of electrostatic interactions for propagating bilayer formation differs for the two substrates; electrostatic attraction between vesicles and the substrate is necessary for complete bilayer formation on titanium oxide but is not necessary on silicon oxide. Conversely, in the high pH regime, repulsive electrostatic interactions can result in the irreversible adsorption of intact vesicles on silicon oxide and even a reversibly adsorbed vesicle layer on titanium oxide. Together, the results show that pH is an effective tool to modulate vesicle-substrate interactions in order to create various self-assembled lipid platforms on hydrophilic substrates.  相似文献   

8.
Atomic force microscopy (AFM) studies under aqueous buffer probed the role of chemical affinity between liposomes, consisting of large unilamellar vesicles, and substrate surfaces in driving vesicle rupture and tethered lipid bilayer membrane (tLBM) formation on Au surfaces. 1,2-Distearoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine-N-poly(ethylene glycol)-2000-N-[3-(2-pyridyldithio) propionate] (DSPE-PEG-PDP) was added to 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) vesicles to promote interactions via Au-thiolate bond formation. Forces induced by an AFM tip leading to vesicle rupture on Au were quantified as a function of DSPE-PEG-PDP composition with and without osmotic pressure. The critical forces needed to initiate rupture of vesicles with 2.5, 5, and 10 mol % DSPE-PEG-PDP are approximately 1.1, 0.8, and 0.5 nN, respectively. The critical force needed for tLBM formation decreases from 1.1 nN (without osmotic pressure) to 0.6 nN (with an osmotic pressure due to 5 mM of CaCl(2)) for vesicles having 2.5 mol % DSPE-PEG-PDP. Forces as high as 5 nN did not lead to LBM formation from pure POPC vesicles on Au. DSPE-PEG-PDP appears to be important to anchor and deform vesicles on Au surfaces. This study demonstrates how functional lipids can be used to tune vesicle-surface interactions and elucidates the role of vesicle-substrate interactions in vesicle rupture.  相似文献   

9.
Membrane proteins are some of the most sophisticated molecules found in nature. These molecules have extraordinary recognition properties; hence, they represent a vast source of specialized materials with potential uses in sensing and screening applications. However, the strict requirement of the native lipid environment to preserve their structure and functionality presents an impediment in building biofunctional materials from these molecules. In general, the purification protocols remove the native lipid support structures found in the cellular environment that stabilize the membrane proteins. Furthermore, the membrane protein structure is often highly complex, typified by large, multisubunit complexes that not only span the lipid bilayer but also contain large (>2 nm) cytoplasmic and extracellular domains that protrude from the membrane. The present study is focused on using a biomimetic approach to build a stable, fluid microenvironment to be used to incorporate larger membrane proteins of interest into a tether-supported lipid bilayer membrane adequately spaced above a substrate passivated to liposome fusion and nonspecific adsorption. Our aim is to reintroduce the supporting structures of the native cell membrane using self-assembled supramolecular complexes constructed on microspheres in an artificial cytoskeleton motif. Central to our architecture is to utilize bacteriorhodopsin (bR), a transmembrane protein, as a biomembrane anchoring molecule to be tethered to surfaces of interest as a sparse structural element in the design. Compared to a typical lipid tether, which inserts into one leaflet of the lipid bilayer, bR anchoring provides an over 8-fold greater hydrophobic surface area in contact with the bilayer. In the work presented here, the silica microsphere surface was biofunctionalized with streptavidin to make it a suitable supporting interface. This was achieved by self-assembly of (p-aminophenyl)trimethoxysilane on the silica surface followed by subsequent conjugation of biotin-PEG3400 (PEG = poly(ethylene glycol) and PEG2000 for further passivation and the binding of streptavidin. We have conjugated bR with biotin-PEG3400 through amine-based coupling to use it as a tether. The biotin-PEG-bR conjugate was further labeled with Texas Red to facilitate localization via fluorescence imaging. Confocal microscopy was utilized to analyze the microsphere surface at different stages of surface modification by employing fluorescent staining techniques. Sparely tethered supported lipid bilayer membranes were constructed successfully on streptavidin-functionalized silica particles (5 mum) using a detergent-based method in which tethered bR nucleates self-assembly of the bilayer membrane. The fluidity of the supported membranes was analyzed using fluorescence recovery after photobleaching in confocal imaging detection mode. The phospholipid diffusion coefficients obtained from these studies indicated that nativelike fluidity was achieved in the tether-supported membranes, thus providing a prospective microenvironment for insertion of membrane proteins of interest.  相似文献   

10.
The HERG potassium channel was incorporated in a mercury-supported tethered bilayer lipid membrane (tBLM) obtained by anchoring a thiolipid monolayer to the mercury surface and by self-assembling a lipid monolayer on top of it from a lipid film spread on the surface of an electrolyte solution. HERG was then incorporated in this tBLM from its micellar solution in Triton X-100, thus avoiding the use of vesicles in the preparation of the tBLM and of proteoliposomes in channel incorporation. The HERG "inward" current following a repolarization step was obtained by subtracting the current recorded upon addition of the specific inhibitor WAY from that recorded prior to this addition. This current was compared with that reported in the literature by the patch-clamp technique.  相似文献   

11.
Kim P  Lee SE  Jung HS  Lee HY  Kawai T  Suh KY 《Lab on a chip》2006,6(1):54-59
We present simple soft lithographic methods for patterning supported lipid bilayer (SLB) membranes onto a surface and inside microfluidic channels. Micropatterns of polyethylene glycol (PEG)-based polymers were fabricated on glass substrates by microcontact printing or capillary moulding. The patterned PEG surfaces have shown 97 +/- 0.5% reduction in lipid adsorption onto two dimensional surfaces and 95 +/- 1.2% reduction inside microfluidic channels in comparison to glass control. Atomic force microscopy measurements indicated that the deposition of lipid vesicles led to the formation of SLB membranes by vesicle fusion due to hydrophilic interactions with the exposed substrate. Furthermore, the functionality of the patterned SLBs was tested by measuring the binding interactions between biotin (ligand)-labeled lipid bilayer and streptavidin (receptor). SLB arrays were fabricated with spatial resolution down to approximately 500 nm on flat substrate and approximately 1 microm inside microfluidic channels, respectively.  相似文献   

12.
The black lipid membranes (BLMs) are artificial membrane systems that have been widely used in the study of different biological processes. In this paper the planar bilayer lipid membranes have been used to study the behavior of thiolipid molecules-dipalmitoyl-phosphatidyl-ethanolamine-mercaptopropionamide (DPPE-MPA) and cholesteryl 3-mercaptopropionate (Chs-MPA)-as compared to classical BLM made of natural lipids. We present our experiments on black thiolipid bilayer (BTM) formation from a thiolipid solution and basic results of pump currents generated by sodium-potassium pump-Na(+),K(+)-ATP-ase-introduced to such bilayer systems via proteoliposome adsorption with subsequent fusion. Our results imply that no substantial difference exists between BLMs formed from classical lipids and those made from thiolipids used in this study. The same thiolipid molecules were subsequently used for the formation of covalently bound, tethered bilayer lipid membranes (t-BLMs) on polycrystalline gold electrodes. Similarly, as in the case of BLMs, we took advantage of proteoliposome adsorption/fusion to obtain a t-BLM system with reconstituted enzyme. The vesicle fusion on hydrophobic or hydrophilic substrates is one of the main ways to obtain a bilayer system with incorporated biological species. In this paper we present also our preliminary results of electrochemical experiments using rapid solution exchange technique on such t-BLMs systems and their comparison with painted solid supported membranes (SSMs) and BLMs. We have also followed the process of vesicles fusion onto thiolipid monolayer by means of in situ atomic force microscopy in tapping mode (TM-AFM). On the basis of these experiments, we conclude that DPPE-MPA and Chs-MPA molecules used in our experiments preserve lipid properties, allowing for at least partial reconstitution of Na(+),K(+)-ATP-ase into such t-BLMs. On the other hand, the relatively compact organization on polycrystalline gold and the hydrophobic nature of the first monolayer of tethered thiolipids slows down the proteoliposome fusion onto such monolayers and consequently hinders the protein insertion. However, this effect can be overcome by mechanical stimulus that facilitates proteoliposome delamination onto the self-assembled monolayer.  相似文献   

13.
We have investigated the effect of well-defined nanoscale topography on the 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) lipid vesicle adsorption and supported phospholipid bilayer (SPB) formation on SiO2 surfaces using a quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (QCM-D) and atomic force microscopy (AFM). Unilamellar lipid vesicles with two different sizes, 30 and 100 nm, were adsorbed on pitted surfaces with two different pit diameters, 110 and 190 nm, as produced by colloidal lithography, and the behavior was compared to results obtained on flat surfaces. In all cases, complete bilayer formation was observed after a critical coverage of adsorbed vesicles had been reached. However, the kinetics of the vesicle-to-bilayer transformation, including the critical coverage, was significantly altered by surface topography for both vesicle sizes. Surface topography hampered the overall bilayer formation kinetics for the smaller vesicles, but promoted SPB formation for the larger vesicles. Depending on vesicle size, we propose two modifications of the precursor-mediated vesicle-to-bilayer transformation mechanism used to describe supported lipid bilayer formation on the corresponding flat surface. Our results may have important implications for various lipid-membrane-based applications using rough or topographically structured surfaces.  相似文献   

14.
To implement the molecular recognition properties of membrane proteins for applications including biosensors and diagnostic arrays, the construction of a biomimetic platform capable of maintaining protein structure and function is required. In this paper, we describe a tethered phospholipid vesicle assembly that overcomes the major limitations of planar supported lipid bilayers and alternative biomimetic membrane platforms and characterize it using quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (QCM-D) and fluorescence microscopy. We provide evidence of a one-step mechanism for bilayer formation and monitor the subsequent adsorption and binding of streptavidin, vesicles, and streptavidin-coated microspheres. For all three species, we identify a critical surface density above which a significant amount of coupled interstitial water contributes to the response of the quartz resonator in a phenomenon similar to dynamic coupling due to surface roughness. A Sauerbrey-type analysis is sufficient to accurately interpret the QCM-D results for streptavidin binding if water is treated as an additional inertial mass, but viscoelastic models must be invoked for vesicle and microsphere binding. Additionally, we present evidence of vesicle flattening, possibly enhanced by a biotin-mediated membrane-membrane interaction.  相似文献   

15.
This paper reports that structurally positively charged layered double hydroxides (LDHs) nanoparticles induce the vesicle formation in a mixture of a zwitterionic surfactant, lauryl sulfonate betaine (LSB), and an anionic surfactant, sodium dodecyl benzenesulfonate (SDBS). The existence of vesicles was demonstrated by negative‐staining (NS‐TEM) and freeze‐fracture (FF‐TEM) transmission electron microscopy and confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM). The size of vesicles increased with the increase of volume ratio (Q) of Mg3Al‐LDHs sol to the SDBS/LSB solution. A new composite of LDHs nanoparticles encapsulated in vesicles was formed. A possible mechanism of LDHs‐induced vesicle formation was suggested. The positive charged LDHs surface attracted negatively charged micelles or free amphiphilic molecules, which facilitated their aggregation into a bilayer membrane. The bilayer membranes could be closed to form vesicles that have LDHs particles encapsulated. It was also found that an adsorbed compound layer of LSB and SDBS micelles or molecules on the LDHs surface played a key role in the vesicle formation.  相似文献   

16.
Recent experimental investigations of the kinetics of vesicle adsorption in solution on SiO2 demonstrate a thermally activated transition from adsorbed intact vesicles to a supported lipid bilayer. Our Monte Carlo simulations clarify the mechanism of this process. The model employed is an extension of the model used earlier to describe vesicle adsorption at room temperature. Specifically, it includes limitations of the adsorption rate by vesicle diffusion in the solution, and adsorption- and lipid-membrane-induced rupture of arriving and already adsorbed vesicles. Vesicles and lipid molecules, formed after rupture of vesicles, are considered immobile. With these ingredients, the model is able to quantitatively reproduce the temperature-dependent adsorption kinetics, including a higher critical surface concentration of intact vesicles for lower temperatures, and the apparent activation energy for the vesicle-to-bilayer transition E(a) approximately 5 kcal/mol.  相似文献   

17.
ABSTRACT

It is our concept to use a polymer as a hydrophilic cushion to stabilize a lipid bilayer on a solid support. This can be accomplished by using polyacrylamides with disulfides and DMPE anchors as a hydrophilic cushion. These polymers have the additional functionalities to chemisorb on gold surfaces through the disulfides and to bind a lipid bilayer on it through the insertion of the lipid anchors into the lipid bilayer. This paper shows that a polymer with the additional functionality of charged groups increases the attraction of vesicles to form a tethered supported lipid bilayer. By varying the amount of charged groups in the polymer, we are able to control the hydrophilic behavior of the polymer and therefore are able to change the wetting on a surface. This was examined by measuring the contact angles. Using the technique of the surface plasmon spectroscopy, we are able to monitor the process of vesicle fusion on the polymer support.  相似文献   

18.
Micropipet aspiration of phase-separated lipid bilayer vesicles can elucidate physicochemical aspects of membrane fluid phase coexistence. Recently, we investigated the composition dependence of line tension at the boundary between liquid-ordered and liquid-disordered phases of giant unilamellar vesicles obtained from ternary lipid mixtures using this approach. Here we examine mechanical equilibria and stability of dumbbell-shaped vesicles deformed by line tension. We present a relationship between the pipet aspiration pressure and the aspiration length in vesicles with two coexisting phases. Using a strikingly simple mechanical model for the free energy of the vesicle, we predict a relation that is in almost quantitative agreement with experiment. The model considers the vesicle free energy to be proportional to line tension and assumes that the vesicle volume, domain area fraction, and total area are conserved during aspiration. We also examine a mechanical instability encountered when releasing a vesicle from the pipet. We find that this releasing instability is observed within the framework of our model that predicts a change of the compressibility of a pipet-aspirated membrane cylinder from positive (i.e., stable) to negative (unstable) values, at the experimental instability. The model furthermore includes an aspiration instability that has also previously been experimentally described. Our method of studying micropipet-induced shape transitions in giant vesicles with fluid domains could be useful for investigating vesicle shape transitions modulated by bending stiffness and line tension.  相似文献   

19.
In this paper, it is reported that positively charged Mg3Al layered double hydroxide (LDH) nanoparticles can induce the spontaneous formation of vesicles in micelle solution of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and dodecyltrimethylammonium bromide (DTAB) with a mass ratio of 8:2. The formation of vesicles was demonstrated by negative-staining transmission electron microscopy observations. The size of the vesicles increased with the increase in the concentration of Mg3Al-LDH nanoparticles. A composite of LDH nanoparticles encapsulated in vesicles was formed. A possible mechanism of LDH-induced vesicle formation was suggested. The positively charged LDH surface attracts negatively charged micelles or free amphiphilic molecules, which facilitates their aggregation into bilayer patches. These bilayer patches connect to each other and finally close to form vesicles. It was also found that an adsorbed compound layer of SDS and DTAB micelles or molecules on the LDHs surface played a key role in vesicle formation.  相似文献   

20.
The size-dependent behavior of small unilamellar vesicles is explored by dissipative particle dynamics, including the membrane characteristics and mechanical properties. The spontaneously formed vesicles are in the metastable state and the vesicle size is controlled by the concentration of model lipids. As the vesicle size decreases, the bilayer gets thinner and the area density of heads declines. Nonetheless, the area density in the inner leaflet is higher than that in the outer. The packing parameters are calculated for both leaflets. The result indicates that the shape of lipid in the outer leaflet is like a truncated cone but that in the inner leaflet resembles an inverted truncated cone. Based on a local order parameter, our simulations indication that the orientation order of lipid molecules decreases as the size of the vesicle reduces and this fact reveals that the bilayer becoming thinner for smaller vesicle is mainly attributed to the orientation disorder of the lipids. The membrane tension can be obtained through the Young-Laplace equation. The tension is found to grow with reducing vesicle size. Therefore, small vesicles are less stable against fusion. Using the inflation method, the area stretching and bending moduli can be determined and those moduli are found to grow with reducing size. Nonetheless, a general equation with a single numerical constant can relate bending modulus, area stretching modulus, and bilayer thickness irrespective of the vesicle size. Finally, a simple metastable model is proposed to explain the size-dependent behavior of bilayer thickness, orientation, and tension.  相似文献   

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