Recent findings suggest that shell protein distribution and the morphology of bacterial microcompartments regulate the chemical fluxes facilitating reactions which dictate their biological function. We explore how the morphology and component patterning are coupled through the competition of mean and gaussian bending energies in multicomponent elastic shells that form three-component irregular polyhedra. We observe two softer components with lower bending rigidities allocated on the edges and vertices while the harder component occupies the faces.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCharged colloidal particles propel themselves through asymmetric fluxes of chemically generated ions on their surface. We show that asymmetry in the surface charge distribution provides an additional mode of self-propulsion at the nanoscale for chemically active particles that produce ionic species. Particles of sizes smaller than or comparable to the Debye length achieve directed self-propulsion through surface charge asymmetry even when ionic flux is uniform over its surface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell membranes are composed of a great variety of protein and lipid species with distinct unperturbed hydrophobic thicknesses. To achieve hydrophobic matching, the lipid bilayer tends to deform around membrane proteins so as to match the protein hydrophobic thickness at bilayer-protein interfaces. Such protein-induced distortions of the lipid bilayer hydrophobic thickness incur a substantial energy cost that depends critically on the bilayer-protein hydrophobic mismatch, while distinct conformational states of membrane proteins often show distinct hydrophobic thicknesses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCaveolae are cell membrane invaginations of defined lipid and protein composition that flatten with increasing membrane tension. Super-resolution light microscopy and electron microscopy have revealed that caveolae can take a variety of cuplike shapes. We show here that, for the range in membrane tension relevant for cell membranes, the competition between membrane tension and membrane bending yields caveolae with cuplike shapes similar to those observed experimentally.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell membranes show an intricate organization of lipids and membrane proteins into domains with distinct composition and hydrophobic thickness. Using mechanosensitive ion channels as a model system, we employ the membrane elasticity theory of lipid-protein interactions together with the Landau-Ginzburg theory of lipid domain formation to quantify protein-induced lipid bilayer thickness deformations in lipid bilayers with heterogeneous hydrophobic thickness. We show that protein-induced lipid bilayer thickness deformations yield, without any assumptions about preferential interactions between particular lipid and protein species, organization of lipids and membrane proteins according to their preferred hydrophobic thickness, and couple the conformational states of membrane proteins to the local membrane composition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectrostatic interactions affect the immersion depth of charged nanoparticles that are trapped at an air-water interface. Recent experiments indicate that upon adding salt negatively charged nanoparticles penetrate deeper into the aqueous phase, whereas positively charged nanoparticles exhibit opposite behavior. It has been proposed that this unexpected lack of invariance with respect to the nanoparticle's charge reversal is caused by a negative surface potential of the air-water interface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
March 2012
In the classical mean-field description of the electric double layer, known as the Poisson-Boltzmann model, ions interact exclusively through their Coulomb potential. Ion specificity can arise through solvent-mediated, nonelectrostatic interactions between ions. We employ the Yukawa pair potential to model the presence of nonelectrostatic interactions.
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