Suspended phospholipid bilayers: a new biological membrane mimetic

16 August 2022, Version 2
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Hypothesis: The attractive interaction between a cationic surfactant monolayer at the air-water interface and vesicles, incorporating anionic lipids, is sufficient to drive the adsorption and deformation of the vesicles. Osmotic rupture of the vesicles produces a continuous lipid bilayer beneath the monolayer. Experimental: Specular neutron reflectivity has been measured from the surface of a purpose-built laminar flow trough, which allows for rapid adsorption of vesicles, the changes in salt concentration required for osmotic rupture of the adsorbed vesicles into a bilayer, and for neutron contrast variation of the sub-phase without disturbing the monolayer. Findings: The neutron reflectivity profiles measured after vesicle addition are consistent with the adsorption and flattening of the vesicles beneath the monolayer. An increase in the buffer salt concentration results in further flattening and fusion of the adsorbed vesicles, which are ruptured by a subsequent decrease in the salt concentration. This process results in a continuous, high coverage, bilayer suspended 11A beneath the monolayer. As the bilayer is not constrained by a solid substrate, this new mimetic is well-suited to studying the structure of lipid bilayers that include transmembrane proteins.

Keywords

biophysics
lipid bilayers

Supplementary materials

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Title
Supplementary Information for Suspended phospholipid bilayers: a new biological membrane mimetic
Description
Supplementary Information for Suspended phospholipid bilayers: a new biological membrane mimetic
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