Membrane-mediated force transduction: Stick-slip motion of vesicles with fluid membranes
Paula Magrinya, Arin Escobar Ortiz, Juan L. Aragones, Laura R. Arriaga

TL;DR
This study investigates how fluid membranes mediate force transduction by analyzing the stick-slip motion of vesicles with embedded magnetic particles, revealing the influence of membrane properties on propulsion efficiency.
Contribution
The paper introduces a minimal experimental system to explore the coupling of internal forces and vesicle motion, highlighting the roles of membrane elasticity, phase behavior, and fluctuations.
Findings
Membrane elasticity and phase coexistence critically affect force transmission.
Local membrane deformation dissipates stress, reducing propulsion efficiency.
Phase-separated membranes influence particle orientation and membrane structure.
Abstract
How internal forces are transduced into motion through soft, fluid membranes remains a fundamental question in the study of active systems. To investigate this coupling, we develop a minimal system consisting of a single ferromagnetic particle encapsulated within a lipid vesicle with controlled membrane composition and phase behavior. An external rotating magnetic field actuates the particle, which rotates and translates along the inner membrane leaflet. This motion generates local slip in the membrane; near a substrate, the slip creates a shear gradient across the lubrication gap that propels the vesicle forward. Propulsion is intermittent and strongest when the particle moves near the vesicle bottom, where stress transmission is most effective. We find that the coupling between internal flows and vesicle motion is highly sensitive to membrane elasticity, excess area, and phase…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLipid Membrane Structure and Behavior · Micro and Nano Robotics · Force Microscopy Techniques and Applications
