A Microscopic Model for Lipid/protein Bilayers with Critical Mixing
Overview
Biophysics
Affiliations
A statistical mechanical lattice model is proposed to describe the phase diagram of phospholipid bilayers with small transmembrane proteins or polypeptides. The model is based on the extended Pink-Green-Chapman model (Zhang et al. (1992) Phys. Rev. A 45, 7560-7567) for pure lipid bilayers which undergo a first-order gel-fluid phase transition. The interaction between the lipid bilayer and the protein or polypeptide is modelled using the concept of hydrophobic matching. The phase diagram has been derived by computer-simulation techniques which fully account for thermal density fluctuations and which operate on the level of the free-energy thereby permitting an accurate identification of the phase boundaries. The calculations predict a closed loop of gel-fluid coexistence with a lower critical mixing point. Specific-heat traces across the phase diagram are also presented. The theoretical results for the phase diagram, the specific-heat function, and the transition enthalpy are related to recent experimental measurements on phospholipid bilayers mixed with synthetic transmembrane amphiphilic polypeptides or with gramicidin A.
Regimes of Complex Lipid Bilayer Phases Induced by Cholesterol Concentration in MD Simulation.
Pantelopulos G, Straub J Biophys J. 2018; 115(11):2167-2178.
PMID: 30414630 PMC: 6289039. DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2018.10.011.
Pantelopulos G, Nagai T, Bandara A, Panahi A, Straub J J Chem Phys. 2017; 147(9):095101.
PMID: 28886648 PMC: 5648569. DOI: 10.1063/1.4999709.
Minimal model of plasma membrane heterogeneity requires coupling cortical actin to criticality.
Machta B, Papanikolaou S, Sethna J, Veatch S Biophys J. 2011; 100(7):1668-77.
PMID: 21463580 PMC: 3072667. DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2011.02.029.
Ehrig J, Petrov E, Schwille P Biophys J. 2010; 100(1):80-9.
PMID: 21190659 PMC: 3010007. DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2010.11.002.
Farkas E, Webb W Rev Sci Instrum. 2010; 81(9):093704.
PMID: 20886984 PMC: 2955721. DOI: 10.1063/1.3483263.