
Thermodynamics of wetting, prewetting and surface phase transitions with surface binding
Author(s) -
Xiaochu Zhao,
Giacomo Bartolucci,
Alf Honigmann,
Frank Jülicher,
Christoph A. Weber
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
new journal of physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.584
H-Index - 190
ISSN - 1367-2630
DOI - 10.1088/1367-2630/ac320b
Subject(s) - wetting , membrane , wetting transition , chemical physics , wetting layer , phase transition , saturation (graph theory) , phase (matter) , phase diagram , molecule , thermodynamics , physics , chemistry , organic chemistry , biochemistry , mathematics , combinatorics
In living cells, protein-rich condensates can wet the cell membrane and surfaces of membrane-bound organelles. Interestingly, many phase-separating proteins also bind to membranes leading to a molecular layer of bound molecules. Here we investigate how binding to membranes affects wetting, prewetting and surface phase transitions. We derive a thermodynamic theory for a three-dimensional bulk in the presence of a two-dimensional, flat membrane. At phase coexistence, we find that membrane binding facilitates complete wetting and thus lowers the wetting angle. Moreover, below the saturation concentration, binding facilitates the formation of a thick layer at the membrane and thereby shifts the prewetting phase transition far below the saturation concentration. The distinction between bound and unbound molecules near the surface leads to a large variety of surface states and complex surface phase diagrams with a rich topology of phase transitions. Our work suggests that surface phase transitions combined with molecular binding represent a versatile mechanism to control the formation of protein-rich domains at intra-cellular surfaces.