TL;DR
This paper investigates how near-critical membranes can promote the formation of surface densities through a pre-wetting-like transition, revealing a new phase behavior relevant to cellular processes.
Contribution
It introduces a minimal model combining polymer simulations and Landau theory to explain surface densities as a novel phase near membrane criticality.
Findings
Proximity to membrane criticality broadens the pre-wetting transition regime.
Surface densities can coexist with bulk phases even when bulk phases are unstable.
Simulations show three surface phase coexistence despite only two phases in bulk.
Abstract
Recent work has highlighted roles for thermodynamic phase behavior in diverse cellular processes. Proteins and nucleic acids can phase separate into three-dimensional liquid droplets in the cytoplasm and nucleus and the plasma membrane of animal cells appears tuned close to a two-dimensional liquid-liquid critical point. In some examples, cytoplasmic proteins aggregate at plasma membrane domains, forming structures such as the post-synaptic density and diverse signaling clusters. Here we examine the physics of these surface densities, employing minimal simulations of co-acervating polymers coupled to an Ising membrane surface in conjunction with a complementary Landau theory. We argue that these surface densities are a novel phase reminiscent of pre-wetting, in which a molecularly thin three-dimensional liquid forms on a usually solid surface. However, in surface densities the solid…
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