» Articles » PMID: 32046489

Osmotic Concentration-Controlled Particle Uptake and Wrapping-Induced Lysis of Cells and Vesicles

Overview
Journal Nano Lett
Specialty Biotechnology
Date 2020 Feb 13
PMID 32046489
Citations 8
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

In vivo, high protein and ion concentrations determine the preferred volumes of cells, organelles, and vesicles. Deformations of their lipid-bilayer membranes by nanoparticle wrapping reduce the interior volumes available to solutes and thus induce large osmotic pressure differences. Osmotic concentration can therefore be an important control parameter for wrapping of nanoparticles. We employ a curvature-elasticity model of the membrane and contact interaction with spherical particles to study their wrapping at initially spherical vesicles. Although the continuous particle-binding transition is independent of the presence of solutes, the discontinuous envelopment transition shifts to higher adhesion strengths and the corresponding energy barrier increases with increasing osmotic concentration. High osmotic concentrations stabilize partial-wrapped, membrane-bound states for both, particle attachment to the inside and the outside. In this regime, wrapping of particles controls membrane tension, with power-law dependencies on osmotic concentration and adhesion strength. For high adhesion strengths, particle wrapping can lead to the opening of mechanosensitive channels in cell membranes and to lysis. Membrane tension-induced stabilization of partial-wrapped states as well as wrapping-induced lysis play important roles not only for desired mechano-bacteriocidal effects of engineered nanomaterials but may also determine viral burst sizes of bacteria and control endocytosis for mammalian cells.

Citing Articles

Adhesion-driven vesicle translocation through membrane-covered pores.

Baruah N, Midya J, Gompper G, Dasanna A, Auth T Biophys J. 2025; 124(5):740-752.

PMID: 39863923 PMC: 11897550. DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2025.01.012.


Review of Gold Nanoparticles: Synthesis, Properties, Shapes, Cellular Uptake, Targeting, Release Mechanisms and Applications in Drug Delivery and Therapy.

Georgeous J, AlSawaftah N, Abuwatfa W, Husseini G Pharmaceutics. 2024; 16(10).

PMID: 39458661 PMC: 11510955. DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics16101332.


Evaluation of the effects of zinc oxide (ZnO NPs) nanoparticles synthesized by green synthesis on Caenorhabditis elegans.

Zongur A, Zeybekler S Biol Futur. 2024; 75(4):411-423.

PMID: 38662325 DOI: 10.1007/s42977-024-00217-3.


Role of Shape in Particle-Lipid Membrane Interactions: From Surfing to Full Engulfment.

van der Ham S, Agudo-Canalejo J, Vutukuri H ACS Nano. 2024; 18(15):10407-10416.

PMID: 38513125 PMC: 11025115. DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.3c11106.


Wrapping anisotropic microgel particles in lipid membranes: Effects of particle shape and membrane rigidity.

Liu X, Auth T, Hazra N, Ebbesen M, Brewer J, Gompper G Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2023; 120(30):e2217534120.

PMID: 37459547 PMC: 10372639. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2217534120.