A rationale for mesoscopic domain formation in biomembranes
Nicolas Destainville (LPT-IRSAMC), Manoel Manghi (LPT-IRSAMC), Julie, Cornet (LPT-IRSAMC)

TL;DR
This paper reviews the mechanisms behind mesoscopic domain formation in biomembranes, emphasizing equilibrium and out-of-equilibrium processes, especially symmetry breaking, supported by theoretical, simulation, and experimental insights.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive classification of mechanisms leading to mesophase separation in biomembranes, integrating thermodynamic and active processes with experimental validation.
Findings
Symmetry breaking is central to mesophase formation.
Both equilibrium and out-of-equilibrium mechanisms are involved.
Theoretical and experimental results are compared for validation.
Abstract
Cell plasma membranes display a dramatically rich structural complexity characterized by functional sub-wavelength domains with specific lipid and protein composition. Under favorable experimental conditions, patterned morphologies can also be observed in vitro on model systems such as supported membranes or lipid vesicles. Lipid mixtures separating in liquid-ordered and liquid-disordered phases below a demixing temperature play a pivotal role in this context. Protein-protein and protein-lipid interactions also contribute to membrane shaping by promoting small domains or clusters. Such phase separations displaying characteristic length-scales falling in-between the nanoscopic, molecular scale on the one hand and the macroscopic scale on the other hand, are named mesophases in soft condensed matter physics. In this review, we propose a classification of the diverse mechanisms leading to…
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