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Cooperative elastic stresses, the hydrophobic effect, and lipid tilt in membrane remodeling
Authors:Vadim A Frolov  Joshua Zimmerberg
Institution:a Unidad de Biofisica (Centro Mixto CSIC-UPV/EHU), Leioa 48940, Spain
b Departamento de Biochimica y Biología Molecular, Universidad del Pais Vasco, Leioa 48940, Spain
c IKERBASQUE, Basque Foundation for Science, 48011 Bilbao, Spain
d Program in Physical Biology, Eunice Kennedy Schriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, United States
Abstract:One of the fundamental properties of biological membranes is the high lateral integrity provided by the lipid bilayer, the structural core and the foundation of their barrier function. This tensile strength is due to the intrinsic properties of amphiphilic lipid molecules, which spontaneously self-assemble into a stable bilayer structure due to the hydrophobic effect. In the highly dynamic life of cellular membranes systems, however, this integrity has to be regularly compromised. One of the emerging puzzles is the mechanism of localized rupture of lipid monolayer, the formation of tiny hydrophobic patches and flipping of lipid tails between closely apposed monolayers. The energy cost of such processes is prohibitively high, unless cooperative deformations in a small membrane patch are carefully organized. Here we review the latest experimental and theoretical data on how such deformations can be conducted, specifically describing how elastic stresses yield tilting of lipids leading to cooperative restructuring of lipid monolayers. Proteins specializing in membrane remodeling assemble into closely packed circular complexes to arrange these deformations in time and space.
Keywords:Viral infection  Influenza  Exocytosis  Endocytosis  Membrane fusion  Membrane fission  Dynamin  Molecular dynamics  Computer simulations
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