| Interactions transmises par l'interface
Pour plus d'infos, voir la version anglaise ou allemande.
   Publications sur ce thème  (en anglais)Simulations numériques
Aggregation and vesiculation of membrane proteins by curvature-mediated
interactionsBenedict J. Reynwar, Gregoria Illya, Vagelis A. Harmandaris, Martin Michael Müller, Kurt Kremer, Markus Deserno
 Membrane remodelling plays an important role in cellular tasks such as endocytosis, vesiculation and protein sorting, and in the biogenesis of organelles such as the endoplasmic reticulum or the Golgi apparatus. It is well established that the remodelling process is aided by specialized proteins that can sense as well as create membrane curvature, and trigger tubulation when added to synthetic liposomes. Because the energy needed for such large-scale changes in membrane geometry significantly exceeds the binding energy between individual proteins and between protein and membrane, cooperative action is essential. It has recently been suggested that curvature-mediated attractive interactions could aid cooperation and complement the effects of specific binding events on membrane remodelling. But it is difficult to experimentally isolate curvature-mediated interactions from direct attractions between proteins. Moreover, approximate theories predict repulsion between isotropically curving proteins. Here we use coarse-grained membrane simulations to show that curvature-inducing model proteins adsorbed on lipid bilayer membranes can experience attractive interactions that arise purely as a result of membrane curvature. We find that once a minimal local bending is realized, the effect robustly drives protein cluster formation and subsequent transformation into vesicles with radii that correlate with the local curvature imprint. Owing to its universal nature, curvature-mediated attraction can operate even between proteins lacking any specific interactions, such as newly synthesized and still immature membrane proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum.
 Nature 447(7143): pp. 461-464, 2007.
   Théorie
Interface-mediated interactions: Entropic forces of curved membranesPierre Gosselin, Hervé Mohrbach, Martin Michael Müller
 Particles embedded in a fluctuating interface experience forces and torques
mediated by the deformations and by the thermal fluctuations of the medium.
Considering a system of two cylinders bound to a fluid membrane we show that
the entropic contribution enhances the curvature-mediated repulsion between
the two cylinders. This is contrary to the usual attractive Casimir force in
the absence of curvature-mediated interactions. For a large distance between
the cylinders, we retrieve the renormalization of the surface tension of a
flat membrane due to thermal fluctuations.
 Phys. Rev. E, 83(5): 051921, 2011. Cf. aussi arXiv:1011.1221.
 
  Cell Model Approach to Membrane Mediated Protein InteractionsMartin Michael Müller, Markus Deserno
 Membrane-deforming proteins can interact through the curvature
  fields they create.  In the case of many such proteins a cell model
  approach can be used to calculate the energy per protein and
  predict, whether it would lead to phase segregation or
  bud-formation.  Using covariant differential geometry exact results
  are derived for the lateral pressure in terms of geometric
  properties at the cell boundary.  Numerical solutions of the exact
  shape equations in the highly nonlinear regime are found and it is
  seen that both phase segregation and bud formation can occur.
 Prog. Theor. Phys. Suppl., 184: pp. 351-363, 2010.
  Balancing torques in membrane-mediated interactions: Exact results and
numerical illustrationsMartin Michael Müller, Markus Deserno, Jemal Guven
 Torques on interfaces can be described by a divergence-free tensor
which is fully encoded in the geometry. This tensor consists of two
terms, one originating in the couple of the stress, the other capturing 
an intrinsic contribution due to curvature. In analogy to the description 
of forces in terms of a stress tensor, the torque on a particle can be 
expressed as a line integral along any contour surrounding the particle.
Interactions between particles mediated by a fluid membrane are studied
within this framework. In particular, torque balance places a strong
constraint on the shape of the membrane. Symmetric two-particle
configurations admit simple analytical expressions which are valid
in the fully nonlinear regime; in particular, the problem may be
solved exactly in the case of two membrane-bound parallel cylinders.
This apparently simple system provides some flavor of the remarkably
subtle nonlinear behavior associated with membrane-mediated interactions.
 Phys. Rev. E, 76(1): 011921, 2007. Cf. aussi cond-mat/0702340.
 
  Interface mediated interactions between particles -- a geometrical approachMartin Michael Müller, Markus Deserno, Jemal Guven
 Particles bound to an interface interact because they deform its shape. 
The stresses that result are fully encoded in the geometry and described 
by a divergence-free surface stress tensor. This stress tensor can be 
used to express the force on a particle as a line integral along any 
conveniently chosen closed contour that surrounds the particle. The 
resulting expression is exact (i.e., free of any 'smallness' assumptions) 
and independent of the chosen surface parametrization. Additional surface 
degrees of freedom, such as vector fields describing lipid tilt, are readily 
included in this formalism. As an illustration, we derive the exact force 
for several important surface Hamiltonians in various symmetric two-particle 
configurations in terms of the midplane geometry; its sign is evident in 
certain interesting limits. Specializing to the linear regime, where the 
shape can be analytically determined, these general expressions yield 
force-distance relations, several of which have originally been derived 
by using an energy based approach.
 Phys. Rev. E, 72(6): 061407, 2005. Cf. aussi cond-mat/0506019.
 
  Geometry of surface-mediated interactionsMartin Michael Müller, Markus Deserno, Jemal Guven
 Soft interfaces can mediate interactions between particles bound to
them.  The force transmitted through the surface geometry on a
particle may be expressed as a closed line integral of the surface
stress tensor around that particle. This contour may be deformed to
exploit the symmetries present; for two identical particles, one
obtains an exact expression for the force between them in terms of
the local surface geometry of their mid-plane; in the case of a
fluid membrane the sign of the interaction is often evident.  The
approach, by construction, is adapted directly to the surface and is
independent of its parameterization. Furthermore, it is applicable
for arbitrarily large deformations; in particular, it remains valid
beyond the linear small-gradient regime.
 Europhys. Lett., 69(3): pp. 482-488, 2005. Cf. aussi cond-mat/0409043.
 
   |