Formation of dilute adhesion domains driven by weak elasticity-mediated interactions
Nadiv Dharan, Oded Farago

TL;DR
This study investigates how weak elasticity-mediated interactions influence the formation of adhesion domains in cell membranes, concluding that these interactions are insufficient to cause dense clustering but may contribute to semi-dilute domain aggregation.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel mean-field approach to analyze elasticity-mediated interactions, revealing their weakness and limited role in dense domain formation.
Findings
Elasticity-mediated interactions are weak and insufficient for dense domain formation.
Phase behavior exhibits universal features when plotted against scaled density and temperature.
Elastic effects are relevant mainly in dilute membrane systems, not in dense adhesion domains.
Abstract
Cell-cell adhesion is established by specific binding of receptor and ligand proteins. The adhesion bonds attract each other and often aggregate into large clusters that are central to many biological processes. One possible origin of attractive interactions between adhesion bonds is the elastic response of the membranes to their deformation by the bonds. Here, we analyze these elasticity-mediated interactions using a novel mean-field approach. Analysis of systems at different densities of bonds, , reveals that the phase diagram exhibits a nearly-universal behavior when the temperature is plotted vs. the scaled density , where is the linear size of the membrane's region affected by a single bond. The critical point is located at very low densities and slightly below we identify phase coexistence between two low-density phases. Dense…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLipid Membrane Structure and Behavior · Force Microscopy Techniques and Applications · Diffusion and Search Dynamics
