Driving a stimuli-responsive wedge in the packing of phospholipid membranes using bolaamphiphile intercalants
Niki Baccile (LCMCP-SMiLES), Archan Vyas (UC Davis), Ramanujam Ramanujam (LCMCP-SMiLES), Daniel Hermida-Merino, Ingo Hoffmann (ILL), Lionel Porcar (ILL), Atul N. Parikh (UC Davis)

TL;DR
This study investigates how bolaamphiphiles with pH-sensitive shapes influence phospholipid membrane morphology, revealing pH-dependent membrane remodeling mechanisms that could enhance membrane adaptability and functionality.
Contribution
It provides detailed insights into the real-time, pH-dependent effects of bolaamphiphiles on membrane structure using advanced microscopy and scattering techniques.
Findings
Bolaamphiphiles induce large-scale membrane remodeling at all pH levels.
Neutral/acidic pH promotes vesicle fusion and invagination.
Basic pH causes poration, budding, and vesiculation.
Abstract
Bolaamphiphilesamphiphilic molecules with polar groups at each of the two ends of a hydrophobic tail with pH-sensitive spontaneous molecular curvaturesendow membranes of extremophiles with an exquisite balance between stability (or robustness) and adaptability (or plasticity). But how the presence (or real-time insertion) of bolaamphiphiles influences lamellar lipid membranes is poorly understood. Using a combination of time-resolved confocal fluorescence microscopy, in situ small angle X-ray and neutron scattering (SAXS, SANS), and neutron spin echo (NSE) measurements, we monitor here the pH-dependent interactions of nanoscopic vesicles of a representative bolaamphiphilea glucolipid consisting of a single glucose headgroup and a C18:1 (oleyl) fatty acid tail (G-C18:1)with the membranes of an essentially cylindrical, fluid-phase phospholipid (dioleoylphosphatidylcholine, DOPC). We find…
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