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Bilayer sheet protrusions and budding from bilayer membranes induced by hydrolysis and condensation reactions

Shape transformations of flat bilayer membranes and vesicles induced by hydrolysis and condensation reactions of amphiphilic molecules are studied using coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations. The hydrolysis and condensation reactions result in the formation and dissociation of amphiphilic mo...

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Published in:Soft matter 2018, Vol.14 (8), p.1397-1407
Main Authors: Nakagawa, Koh M, Noguchi, Hiroshi
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Language:English
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description Shape transformations of flat bilayer membranes and vesicles induced by hydrolysis and condensation reactions of amphiphilic molecules are studied using coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations. The hydrolysis and condensation reactions result in the formation and dissociation of amphiphilic molecules, respectively. Asymmetric reactions between the inner and outer leaflets of a vesicle can transport amphiphilic molecules between the leaflets. It is found that the resulting area difference between the two leaflets induces bilayer sheet protrusion (BP) and budding at low reduced volumes of the vesicles, whereas BP only occurs at high reduced volumes. The probabilities of these two types of transformations depend on the shear viscosity of the surrounding fluids compared to the membrane as well as the reaction rates. A higher surrounding fluid viscosity leads to more BP formation. The inhomogeneous spatial distribution of the hydrophobic reaction products forms the nuclei of BP formation, and faster diffusion of the products enhances BP formation. Our results suggest that adjustment of the viscosity is important to control membrane shape transformations in experiments.
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subjects Condensates
Condensation
Diffusion rate
Fluid dynamics
Hydrolysis
Hydrophobicity
Membranes
Molecular dynamics
Nuclei
Reaction products
Shear viscosity
Spatial distribution
Transformations
Vesicles
Viscosity
title Bilayer sheet protrusions and budding from bilayer membranes induced by hydrolysis and condensation reactions
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