The transport along membrane nanotubes driven by the spontaneous curvature of membrane components

2012 
article i nfo Intercellular membrane nanotubes (ICNs) serve as a very specific transport system between neighboring cells. The underlying mechanisms responsible for the transport of membrane components and vesicular di- lations along the ICNs are not clearly understood. The present study investigated the spatial distribution of anisotropic membrane components of tubular shapes and isotropic membrane components of spherical shapes. Experimental results revealed the preferential distribution of CTB (cholera toxin B)-GM1 complexes mainly on the spherical cell membrane, and cholesterol-sphingomyelin at the membrane leading edge and ICNs. In agreement with previous studies, we here propose that the spatial distribution of CTB-GM1 com- plexes and cholesterol-sphingomyelin rafts were due to their isotropic and anisotropic shapes, respectively. To elucidate the relationship between a membrane component shape and its spatial distribution, a two- component computational model was constructed. The minimization of the membrane bending (free) ener- gy revealed the enrichment of the anisotropic component along the ICN and the isotropic component in the parent cell membrane, which was due to the curvature mismatch between the ICN curvature and the spon- taneous curvature of the isotropic component. The equations of motion, derived from the differentiation of the membrane free energy, revealed a curvature-dependent flux of the isotropic component and a curvature-dependent force exerted on a vesicular dilation along the ICN. Finally, the effects of possible changes in the orientational ordering of the anisotropic component attendant to the transport of the vesicular dilation were discussed with connection to the propagation of electrical and chemical signals.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    43
    References
    10
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []