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Hybrid molecule enables liquid-liquid phase separation in a minimal lipid membrane with only two components

ORAL

Abstract

Liquid-liquid phase separation occurs in a variety of lipid membranes, both biological and synthetic. Except in extraordinary circumstances, at least three lipid components are needed: a phospholipid with ordered chains, a phospholipid with disordered chains, and a sterol. This fact is puzzling, as two components are sufficient from a theoretical standpoint, as well as for liquid-liquid phase separation in lipid monolayers. This hinders understanding of the physics of such transitions in lipid bilayers, as the extra component results in more complicated thermodynamics.

In search of a two-component bilayer displaying liquid-liquid phase separation, we test mixtures in which the sterol and the ordered phospholipid of a phase-separating mixture are replaced with a single, joined sterol-lipid molecule. We find system-scale, reversible, liquid-liquid phase separation in a bilayer with only two components: a sterol-lipid molecule (PChemsPC) and a phospholipid with disordered chains (diPhyPC). This is a truly minimal model system for liquid-liquid phase separation in a bilayer membrane. We construct a miscibility phase diagram for this membrane, from which it is straightforward to determine tie-lines, and thus the composition of each phase.

Publication: K. Wilson, H.Q. Nguyen, J. Gervay-Hague, S.L. Keller (2024). Sterol-lipids enable large-scale, liquid-liquid phase separation in bilayer membranes of only two components. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 121(38), e2401241121.

Presenters

  • Kent Wilson

    University of Washington

Authors

  • Kent Wilson

    University of Washington

  • Huy Q Nguyen

    Genentech

  • Jacquelyn Gervay-Hague

    University of California - Davis

  • Sarah L. Keller

    University of Washington