» Articles » PMID: 25256431

Fluorescent Quantification of Size and Lamellarity of Membrane Nanotubes

Overview
Journal Eur Biophys J
Specialty Biophysics
Date 2014 Sep 27
PMID 25256431
Citations 2
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Membrane nanotubes, ubiquitous in cellular systems, adopt a spectrum of curvatures and shapes that are dictated by their intrinsic physical characteristics as well as their interactions with the local cellular environment. A high bending flexibility is needed in the crowded cytoplasm where tubes often need to bend significantly in the axial direction at sub-micron length scales. We find the stiffness of spontaneously formed membrane nanotubes by measuring the persistence length of reconstituted membrane nanotubes freely suspended in solution and imaged by fluorescence microscopy. By quantifying the tube diameter we demonstrate for the first time that the persistence length scales linearly with radius. Although most tubes are uni-lamellar, the predicted linear scaling between tube radius and persistence length allows us to identify tubes that spontaneously form as multilamellar structures upon hydration. We provide the first experimental evidence that illumination of lipid fluorophores can have a profound effect on the lipid bilayer which we sensitively detect as a continuous change in the tube persistence length with time. The novel assay and methodology here presented has potential for quantification of the structural reinforcement of membrane tubes by scaffolding proteins.

Citing Articles

The flexibility and dynamics of the tubules in the endoplasmic reticulum.

Georgiades P, Allan V, Wright G, Woodman P, Udommai P, Chung M Sci Rep. 2017; 7(1):16474.

PMID: 29184084 PMC: 5705721. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-16570-4.


Dynamics of membrane nanotubes coated with I-BAR.

Barooji Y, Rorvig-Lund A, Semsey S, Reihani S, Bendix P Sci Rep. 2016; 6:30054.

PMID: 27444356 PMC: 4956757. DOI: 10.1038/srep30054.

References
1.
Voeltz G, Prinz W, Shibata Y, Rist J, Rapoport T . A class of membrane proteins shaping the tubular endoplasmic reticulum. Cell. 2006; 124(3):573-86. DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2005.11.047. View

2.
Zhao Y, Tamhane K, Zhang X, An L, Fang J . Radial elasticity of self-assembled lipid tubules. ACS Nano. 2009; 2(7):1466-72. DOI: 10.1021/nn8001517. View

3.
Ramesh P, Baroji Y, Reihani S, Stamou D, Oddershede L, Bendix P . FBAR syndapin 1 recognizes and stabilizes highly curved tubular membranes in a concentration dependent manner. Sci Rep. 2013; 3:1565. PMC: 3610093. DOI: 10.1038/srep01565. View

4.
Heinrich V, Waugh R . A piconewton force transducer and its application to measurement of the bending stiffness of phospholipid membranes. Ann Biomed Eng. 1996; 24(5):595-605. DOI: 10.1007/BF02684228. View

5.
Cui H, Mim C, Vazquez F, Lyman E, Unger V, Voth G . Understanding the role of amphipathic helices in N-BAR domain driven membrane remodeling. Biophys J. 2013; 104(2):404-11. PMC: 3552260. DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2012.12.006. View