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      Compartmentalizing and sculpting nanovesicles by phase-separated aqueous nanodroplets

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      Author(s)
      Sabet, Fatemeh Kazemi
      Bahrami, Arash
      Bahrami, Amir Houshang
      Date
      2022-11-08
      Source Title
      RSC Advances
      Print ISSN
      20462069
      Publisher
      Royal Society of Chemistry
      Volume
      12
      Issue
      49
      Pages
      32035 - 32045
      Language
      English
      Type
      Article
      Item Usage Stats
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      Abstract
      Phase-separated liquid droplets inside giant vesicles have been intensely studied as biomimetic model systems to understand cellular microcompartmentation and molecular crowding and sorting. On the nanoscale, however, how aqueous nanodroplets interact with and shape nanovesicles is poorly understood. We perform coarse-grained molecular simulations to explore the architecture of compartmentalized nanovesicles by phase-separated aqueous nanodroplets, and their morphological evolution under osmotic deflation. We show that phase separation of a biphasic liquid mixture can form both stable two-compartment and meta-stable multi-compartment nanovesicles. We identify morphological transitions of stable two-compartment nanovesicles between tube, sheet and cup morphologies, characterized by membrane asymmetry and phase-separation propensity between the aqueous phases. We demonstrate that the formation of local sheets and in turn cup-shaped nanovesicles is promoted by negative line tensions resulting from large separation propensities, an exclusive nanoscale phenomenon which is not expected for larger vesicles where energetic contributions of the line tensions are dominated by those of the membrane tensions. Despite their instability, we observe long-lived multi-compartment nanovesicles, such as nanotubules and branched tubules, whose prolonged lifetime is attributed to interfacial tensions and membrane asymmetry. Aqueous nanodroplets can thus form novel membrane nanostructures, crucial for cellular processes and forming cellular organelles on the nanoscale. © 2022 The Royal Society of Chemistry.
      Keywords
      Biomimetics
      Coarse-grained modeling
      Membranes
      Nanotechnology
      Permalink
      http://hdl.handle.net/11693/111979
      Published Version (Please cite this version)
      https://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2ra05855c
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