Cellular
cellular compartmentalization
Liquid-liquid phase separation out of equilibrium
Living cells contain millions of enzymes and proteins, which carry out multiple reactions simultaneously. To optimize these processes, cells compartmentalize reactions in membraneless liquid condensates. Certain features of cellular condensates can be explained by principles of liquid-liquid phase separation studied in material science. However, biological condensates exist in the inherently out of equilibrium environment of a living cell, being driven by force-generating microscopic processes. These cellular conditions are fundamentally different than the equilibrium conditions of liquid-liquid phase separation studied in materials science and physics. How condensates function in the active riotous environment of a cell is essential for understanding of cellular functions, as well as to the onset of neurodegenerative diseases. Currently, we lack model systems that enable rigorous studies of these processes. Living cells are too complex for quantitative analysis, while reconstituted equilibrium condensates fail to capture the non-equilibrium environment of biological cells. To bridge this gap, we reconstituted a DNA based membraneless condensates in an active environment that mimics the conditions of a living cell. We combine condensates with a reconstituted network of cytoskeletal filaments and molecular motors, and study how the mechanical interactions change the phase behavior and dynamics of membraneless structures. Studying these composite materials elucidates the fundamental physics rules that govern the behavior of liquid-liquid phase separation away from equilibrium while providing insight into the mechanism of condensate phase separation in cellular environments.
Adhering, wrapping, and bursting of lipid bilayer membranes: understanding effects of membrane-binding particles and polymers
Proteins and membranes form remarkably complex structures that are key to intracellular compartmentalization, cargo transport, and cell morphology. Despite this wealth of examples in living systems, we still lack design principles for controlling membrane morphology in synthetic systems. With experiments and simulations, we show that even the simple case of spherical or rod-shaped nanoparticles binding to lipid-bilayer membrane vesicles results in a remarkably rich set of morphologies that can be reliably controlled via the particle binding energy. When the binding energy is weak relative to a characteristic membrane-bending energy, vesicles adhere to one another and form a soft solid gel, which is a useful platform for controlled release. With larger binding energy, a transition from partial to complete wrapping of the nanoparticles causes a remarkable vesicle destruction process culminating in rupture, nanoparticle-membrane tubules, and vesicle inversion. We have explored the behavior across a wide range of parameter space. These findings help unify the wide range of effects observed when vesicles or cells are exposed to nanoparticles. They also show how they open the door to a new class of vesicle-based, closed-cell gels that are more than 99% water and can encapsulate and release on demand. I will discuss how triggering membrane remodeling could lead to shape-responsive systems in the future.