Spatial organization of, at, and by lipid membranes
Raghuveer Parthasarathy
Department of Physics, University of Oregon
Cellular membranes are remarkable materials flexible, heterogeneous,
two-dimensional fluids whose spatial organization is crucial to many biophysical
processes.
Little is known about the mechanisms that maintain
various modes of organization, and this talk will explore some recent
experiments on this theme.
First, we examine lipid membranes that
phase-separate into coexisting fluid phases widely believed to mimic
phase-separation tendencies in membranes in vivo and ask how the locations of
the various phases can be controlled.
Assisted by microfabricated
surfaces that direct membrane curvature, we find that curvature and phase
separation are closely connected, and that curvature can control the locations
of phase-separated domains.
Next, we examine molecules that mimic
mucins, a class of large brush-like membrane-anchored proteins that are
believed to project outward from cell surfaces to better interact with their
environment.
Using interferometric imaging techniques, we
determine the molecular orientation of these mucin mimics, raising questions
about the mechanisms that control cell-surface protein organization.
Finally, we ask whether the physical properties of membranes might be of
use in creating and organizing new, non-biological materials, and discuss a
nascent project on membrane-mediated colloidal crystallization.