Direct measurement of DNA-mediated adhesion between lipid bilayers
S. F. Shimobayashi, B. M. Mognetti, L. Parolini, D. Orsi, P. Cicuta, and L. Di Michele

TL;DR
This study quantitatively characterizes DNA-mediated adhesion between a liposome and a supported bilayer, combining experiments with theoretical modeling to understand membrane tension and adhesion mechanics.
Contribution
It provides the first quantitative experimental analysis of DNA-mediated adhesion on deformable lipid vesicles, validated by a semi-quantitative theoretical model.
Findings
DNA-mediated forces induce measurable membrane tension.
Theoretical model semi-quantitatively matches experimental data.
FRET spectroscopy characterizes DNA melting transition.
Abstract
Multivalent interactions between deformable mesoscopic units are ubiquitous in biology, where membrane macromolecules mediate the interactions between neighbouring living cells and between cells and solid substrates. Lately, analogous artificial materials have been synthesised by functionalising the outer surface of compliant Brownian units, for example emulsion droplets and lipid vesicles, with selective linkers, in particular short DNA sequences. This development extended the range of applicability of DNA as a selective glue, originally applied to solid nano and colloidal particles. On very deformable lipid vesicles, the coupling between statistical effects of multivalent interactions and mechanical deformation of the membranes gives rise to complex emergent behaviours, as we recently contributed to demonstrate [Parolini et al., Nature Communications, 2015, 6, 5948]. Several aspects…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLipid Membrane Structure and Behavior · Force Microscopy Techniques and Applications · Electrostatics and Colloid Interactions
