Micron-sized domains in quasi single-component giant vesicles
Roland L. Knorr, Jan Steinkuehler, Rumiana Dimova

TL;DR
This study reveals that standard GUV preparation methods can induce micron-sized domains in single-component vesicles due to impurities, affecting membrane heterogeneity and phase behavior.
Contribution
It demonstrates that impurities in glucose solutions can cause abnormal domain formation in GUVs, highlighting the need for careful sample preparation.
Findings
Micron-sized dye-depleted domains form above lipid phase transition temperature.
Stripe-like dye-enriched structures appear near the phase transition.
Adding liposomes suppresses impurity-induced domain formation.
Abstract
Giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs), are a convenient tool to study membrane-bound processes using optical microscopy. An increasing number of studies highlights the potential of these model membranes when addressing questions in membrane biophysics and cell biology. Among them, phase transitions and domain formation, dynamics and stability in raft-like mixtures are probably some of the most intensively investigated. In doing so, many research teams rely on standard protocols for GUV preparation and handling involving the use of sugar solutions. Here, we demonstrate that following such a standard approach can lead to abnormal formation of micron-sized domains in GUVs grown from only a single phospholipid. The membrane heterogeneity is visualized by means of a small fraction (0.1 mol%) of a fluorescent lipid dye. For dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine GUVs, different types of membrane…
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