Cell membrane disruption by vertical nanopillars: the role of membrane bending and traction forces
Rosario Capozza, Valeria Caprettini, Carlo A. Gonano, Alessandro, Bosca, Fabio Moia, Francesca Santoro, Francesco De Angelis

TL;DR
This study combines simulations and experiments to show that sharpness and local geometry of nanopillars significantly influence cell membrane disruption, advancing understanding for biomedical applications.
Contribution
It reveals that membrane rupture depends more on local geometric features like sharpness than on pillar size or aspect ratio.
Findings
High membrane curvature reduces rupture force
Sharp edges increase membrane permeabilization
Local geometry influences membrane disruption
Abstract
Gaining access to the cell interior is fundamental for many applications, such as electrical recording, drug and biomolecular delivery. A very promising technique consists of culturing cells on nano/micro pillars. The tight adhesion and high local deformation of cells in contact with nanostructures can promote the permeabilization of lipids at the plasma membrane, providing access to the internal compartment. However, there is still much experimental controversy regarding when and how the intracellular environment is targeted and the role of the geometry and interactions with surfaces. Consequently, we investigated, by coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations of the cell membrane, the mechanical properties of the lipid bilayer under high strain and bending conditions. We found out that a high curvature of the lipid bilayer dramatically lowers the traction force necessary to achieve…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPolymer Surface Interaction Studies · Lipid Membrane Structure and Behavior · Microfluidic and Bio-sensing Technologies
