The influence of membrane bound proteins on phase separation and coarsening in cell membranes
Author(s) -
Thomas Witkowski,
Rainer Backofen,
Axel Voigt
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
physical chemistry chemical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.053
H-Index - 239
eISSN - 1463-9084
pISSN - 1463-9076
DOI - 10.1039/c2cp41274h
Subject(s) - membrane , lipid raft , scaling , phase (matter) , biophysics , chemical physics , function (biology) , domain (mathematical analysis) , chemistry , materials science , physics , biology , mathematics , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry , geometry , organic chemistry , mathematical analysis
A theoretical explanation of the existence of lipid rafts in cell membranes remains a topic of lively debate. Large, micrometer sized rafts are readily observed in artificial membranes and can be explained using thermodynamic models for phase separation and coarsening. In live cells such domains are not observed and various models are proposed to describe why the systems do not coarsen. We review these attempts critically and show within a phase field approach that membrane bound proteins have the potential to explain the different behaviour observed in vitro and in vivo. Large scale simulations are performed to compute scaling laws and size distribution functions under the influence of membrane bound proteins and to observe a significant slow down of the domain coarsening at longer times and a breakdown of the self-similarity of the size-distribution function.
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