A Microfluidic Platform for Actin-Based Membrane Remodeling Reveals the Stabilizing Role of Branched Actin Networks on Lipid Microdomains
Lixin Huang, Rog\'erio Lopes dos Santos (LAMBE - UMR 8587), Sid Labdi (UEVE, LAMBE - UMR 8587, IUT D'EVRY), Guillaume Lamour (LAMBE - UMR 8587, UEVE), Olek Maciejak (SABNP, LAMBE - UMR 8587), Michel Malo (LAMBE - UMR 8587), John Manzi, Martin Lenz (LPTMS, PMMH)

TL;DR
This study introduces a microfluidic platform to observe how actin networks influence membrane shape changes in GUVs, revealing that branched actin stabilizes lipid microdomains and affects membrane dynamics.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel microfluidic method for analyzing actin-driven membrane remodeling in GUVs, enabling detailed study of membrane-actin interactions in vitro.
Findings
Actin networks prevent lipid microdomain coalescence.
The number of lipid domains influences actin network structure.
Microfluidic approach allows high-throughput membrane remodeling studies.
Abstract
Cell shape changes, essential for processes such as motility or division, are controlled by the actomyosin cortex that actively remodels biological membranes. Their mechanisms can be deciphered in___vitro using biomimetic reconstituted systems, such as giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) with controlled lipid composition coupled to reconstituted actin networks. These assays allow mimicking cell shape changes in controlled biochemical and biophysical environments. However, studying the dynamics of these shape changes on statistically significant populations of GUVs with the possibility to sequentially modify the protein composition of the assay is a major experimental challenge. To address these issues, a microfluidic approach is used to immobilize several dozens of isolated GUVs and monitor membrane and actin network evolution. The loading of the chamber with GUVs and actin is first…
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