Metastability of lipid necks via geometric triality
Piermarco Fonda, Luca Giomi

TL;DR
This paper introduces a geometric framework demonstrating that lipid membrane necks are metastable structures, providing insights into their formation, stability, and the forces involved in cellular membrane penetration.
Contribution
It presents a novel geometric triality approach to explain the metastability of lipid necks and predicts forces involved in membrane penetration processes.
Findings
Lipid necks are metastable structures with finite lifetimes.
The geometric triality framework links different classes of geometric objects.
Explicit calculations of forces required for membrane penetration are provided.
Abstract
"Necks" are features of lipid membranes characterized by an uniquley large curvature, functioning as bridges between different compartments. These features are ubiquitous in the life-cycle of the cell and instrumental in processes such as division, extracellular vesicles uptake and cargo transport between organelles, but also in life-threatening conditions, as in the endocytosis of viruses and phages. Yet, the very existence of lipid necks challenges our understanding of membranes biophysics: their curvature, often orders of magnitude larger than elsewhere, is energetically prohibitive, even with the arsenal of molecular machineries and signalling pathways that cells have at their disposal. Using a geometric triality, namely a correspondence between three different classes of geometric objects, here we demonstrate that lipid necks are in fact metastable, thus can exist for finite, but…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLipid Membrane Structure and Behavior · Cellular transport and secretion · Lipid metabolism and biosynthesis
