Research on giant vesicles is becoming increasingly popular. Giant vesicles provide model biomembrane systems for systematic measurements of mechanical and rheological properties of bilayers as a function of membrane composition and temperature, as well as hydrodynamic interactions. Membrane response to external factors (for example electric fields, ions and amphiphilic molecules) can be directly visualized under the microscope. In this paper we review our current understanding of lipid bilayers as obtained from studies on giant unilamellar vesicles. Because research on giant vesicles increasingly attracts the interest of scientists from various backgrounds, we also try to provide a concise introduction for newcomers in the field. Finally, we summarize some recent developments on curvature effects induced by polymers, domain formation in membranes and shape transitions induced by electric fields.
Fast digital imaging was used to study the deformation and poration of giant unilamellar vesicles subjected to electric pulses. For the first time the dynamics of response and relaxation of the membrane at micron-scale level is revealed at a time resolution of 30 micros. Above a critical transmembrane potential the lipid bilayer ruptures. Formation of macropores (diameter approximately 2 microm) with pore lifetime of approximately 10 ms has been detected. The pore lifetime has been interpreted as interplay between the pore edge tension and the membrane viscosity. The reported data, covering six decades of time, show the following regimes in the relaxation dynamics of the membrane. Tensed vesicles first relax to release the acquired stress due to stretching, approximately 100 micros. In the case of poration, membrane resealing occurs with a characteristic time of approximately 10 ms. Finally, for vesicles with excess area an additional slow regime was observed, approximately 1 s, which we associate with relaxation of membrane curvature. Dimensional analysis can reasonably well explain the corresponding characteristic timescales. Being performed on cell-sized giant unilamellar vesicles, this study brings insight to cell electroporation. The latter is widely used for gene transfection and drug transport across the membrane where processes occurring at different timescales may influence the efficiency.
This review is dedicated to electric field effects on giant unilamellar vesicles, a cell-size membrane system. We summarize various types of behavior observed when vesicles are subjected either to weak AC fields at various frequency, or to strong DC pulses. Different processes such as electrodeformation, -poration and -fusion of giant vesicles are considered. We describe some recent developments, which allowed us to detect the dynamics of the vesicle response with a resolution below milliseconds for all of these processes. Novel aspects on electric field effects on vesicles in the gel phase are introduced.
Membrane fusion is a vital process of life involved, for example, in cellular secretion via exocytosis, signaling between nerve cells, and virus infection. In both the life sciences and bioengineering, controlled membrane fusion has many possible applications, such as drug delivery, gene transfer, chemical microreactors, or synthesis of nanomaterials. Until now, the fusion dynamics has been elusive because direct observations have been limited to time scales that exceed several milliseconds. Here, the fusion of giant lipid vesicles is induced in a controlled manner and monitored with a temporal resolution of 50 s. Two different fusion protocols are used that are based on synthetic fusogenic molecules and electroporation. For both protocols, the opening of the fusion necks is very fast, with an average expansion velocity of centimeters per second. This velocity indicates that the initial formation of a single fusion neck can be completed in a few hundred nanoseconds.electrofusion ͉ fast digital microscopy ͉ liposomes ͉ membrane biophysics ͉ molecular recognition
In a range of low ionic strength, aqueous dispersions of the anionic phospholipid DMPG (dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol) have a transparent intermediate phase (IP, between T(m)(on) congruent with 20 degrees C and T(m)(off) congruent with 30 degrees C) between the turbid gel and fluid membrane phases, evidenced in turbidity data. Small angle x-ray scattering results on DMPG dispersions show that, besides the bilayer peak present in all phases, a peak corresponding to a mesoscopic structure at approximately 400 A is detected only in IP. The dependence of this peak position on DMPG concentration suggests a correlation in the bilayer plane, consistent with the stability of vesicles in IP. Moreover, observation of giant DMPG vesicles with phase contrast light microscopy show that vesicles "disappear" upon cooling below T(m)(off) and "reappear" after reheating. This further proves that although vesicles cannot be visualized in IP, their overall structure is maintained. We propose that the IP in the melting regime corresponds to unilamellar vesicles with perforations, a model which is consistent with all described experimental observations. Furthermore, the opening of pores across the membrane tuned by ionic strength, temperature, and lipid composition is likely to have biological relevance and could be used in applications for controlled release from nanocompartments.
Dimyristoylphosphatidylglycerol (DMPG) has been extensively studied as a model for biological membranes, since phosphatidylglycerol is the most abundant anionic phospholipid in prokaryotic cells. At low ionic strengths, this lipid presents a peculiar thermal behavior, with two sharp changes in the light scattering profile, at temperatures named here T(on)(m) and T(off)(m). Structural changes involved in the DMPG thermal transitions are here investigated by small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), and compared to the results yielded by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and electron spin resonance (ESR). The SAXS results show a broad peak, indicating that DMPG is organized in single bilayers, for the range of temperature studied (10-45 degrees C). SAXS intensity shows an unusual effect, starting to decrease at T(on)(m), and presenting a sharp increase at T(off)(m). The bilayer electron density profiles, obtained from modeling the SAXS curves, show a gradual decrease in electron density contrast (attributed to separation between charged head groups) and in bilayer thickness between T(on)(m) and T(off)(m). Results yielded by SAXS, DSC and ESR indicate that a chain melting process starts at T(on)(m), but a complete fluid phase exists only for temperatures above T(off)(m), with structural changes occurring at the bilayer level in the intermediate region.
We have synthesized the amphiphile photosensitizer PE-porph consisting of a porphyrin bound to a lipid headgroup. We studied by optical microscopy the response to light irradiation of giant unilamellar vesicles of mixtures of unsaturated phosphatidylcholine lipids and PE-porph. In this configuration, singlet oxygen is produced at the bilayer surface by the anchored porphyrin. Under irradiation, the PE-porph decorated giant unilamellar vesicles exhibit a rapid increase in surface area with concomitant morphological changes. We quantify the surface area increase of the bilayers as a function of time and photosensitizer molar fraction. We attribute this expansion to hydroperoxide formation by the reaction of the singlet oxygen with the unsaturated bonds. Considering data from numeric simulations of relative area increase per phospholipid oxidized (15%), we measure the efficiency of the oxidative reactions. We conclude that for every 270 singlet oxygen molecules produced by the layer of anchored porphyrins, one eventually reacts to generate a hydroperoxide species. Remarkably, the integrity of the membrane is preserved in the full experimental range explored here, up to a hydroperoxide content of 60%, inducing an 8% relative area expansion.
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