Effective adhesion strength of specifically bound vesicles
Ana-Suncana Smith, Udo Seifert

TL;DR
This paper presents a theoretical model for the thermodynamic equilibrium of vesicle adhesion, analyzing ligand-receptor interactions, vesicle shape, and effective adhesion strength, with implications for experimental comparison and continuum modeling.
Contribution
It introduces a decoupled approach to model vesicle shape and ligand allocation, providing new insights into adhesion strength and receptor-ligand dynamics.
Findings
Identification of receptor- and ligand-dominated regimes
Critical contact zone size for regime crossover
Approximate expressions for adhesion strength
Abstract
A theoretical approach has been undertaken in order to model the thermodynamic equilibrium of a vesicle adhering to a flat substrate. The vesicle is treated in a canonical description with a fixed number of sites. A finite number of these sites are occupied by mobile ligands that are capable of interacting with a discrete number of receptors immobilized on the substrate. Explicit consideration of the bending energy of the vesicle shape has shown that the problem of the vesicle shape can be decoupled from the determination of the optimum allocation of ligands over the vesicle. The allocation of bound and free ligands in the vesicle could be determined as a function of the size of the contact zone, the ligand-receptor binding strength and the concentration of the system constituents. Several approximate solutions for different regions of system parameters are determined and in particular,…
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