Simulations of Asymmetric Membranes Illustrate Cooperative Leaflet Coupling and Lipid Adaptability.

Front Cell Dev Biol

Biochemical and Biophysical Systems Group, Biosciences and Biotechnology Division, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA, United States.

Published: July 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Biological membranes consist of lipid bilayers that often have uneven lipid compositions and responses to their environments.
  • Understanding lipid asymmetry is complex due to challenges in experimental and computational approaches, particularly in molecular dynamics simulations which face limits on size and time.
  • The study examines different asymmetric membrane systems and highlights the impact of factors like lipid composition, cholesterol presence, and ionic imbalances on the overall structure and properties of the bilayer.

Article Abstract

Biological membranes are composed of lipid bilayers that are often asymmetric with regards to the lipid composition and/or aqueous solvent they separate. Studying lipid asymmetry both experimentally and computationally is challenging. Molecular dynamics simulations of lipid bilayers with asymmetry are difficult due to finite system sizes and time scales accessible to simulations. Due to the very slow flip-flop rate for phospholipids, one must first choose how many lipids are on each side of the bilayer, but the resulting bilayer may be unstable (or metastable) due to differing tensile and compressive forces between leaflets. Here we use molecular dynamics simulations to investigate a number of different asymmetric membrane systems, both with atomistic and coarse-grained models. Asymmetries studied include differences in number of lipids, lipid composition (unsaturated and saturated tails and different headgroups), and chemical gradients between the aqueous phases. Extensive analysis of the bilayers' properties such as area per lipid, density, and lateral pressure profiles are used to characterize bilayer asymmetry. We also address how cholesterol (which flip-flops relatively quickly) influences membrane asymmetries. Our results show how each leaflet is influenced by the other and can mitigate the structural changes to the bilayer overall structure. Cholesterol can respond to changes in bilayer asymmetry to alleviate some of the effect on the bilayer structure, but that will alter its leaflet distribution, which in turn affects its chemical potential. Ionic imbalances are shown to have a modest change in bilayer structure, despite large changes in the electrostatic potential. Bilayer asymmetry can also induce a modest electrostatic potential across the membrane. Our results highlight the importance of membrane asymmetry on bilayer properties, the influence of lipid headgroups, tails and cholesterol on asymmetry, and the ability of lipids to adapt to different environments.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7396604PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2020.00575DOI Listing

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