We investigate a temperature-driven recursive division of binary giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs). During the heating step of the heating-cooling cycle, the spherical mother vesicle deforms to a budded limiting shape using up the excess area produced by the chain melting of the lipids and then splits off into two daughter vesicles. Upon cooling, the daughter vesicle opens a pore and recovers the spherical shape of the mother vesicle. Our GUVs are composed of DLPE (1,2-dilauroyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine) and DPPC (1,2-dipalmitoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine). During each cycle, vesicle deformation is monitored by a fast confocal microscope and the images are analyzed to obtain the time evolution of reduced volume and reduced monolayer area difference as the key geometric parameters that quantify vesicle shape. By interpreting the deformation pathway using the area-difference elasticity theory, we conclude that vesicle division relies on (1) a tiny asymmetric distribution of DLPE within the bilayer, which controls the observed deformation from the sphere to the budded shape; and (2) redistribution of DLPE during the deformation-division stage, which ensures that the process is recursive. The spontaneous coupling between membrane curvature and PE lipid distribution is responsible for the observed recursive division of GUVs. These results shed light on the mechanisms of vesicle self-reproduction.
Crystallization in n-alkane ultrathin films supported by solid substrates is investigated by molecular dynamics simulation. We consider a relatively short n-alkane, undecane C11H24, on a flat substrate of varied degree of attraction. By the use of the united atom model for n-alkane, we reveal several characteristics of the thin film crystallization. It is found that the crystalline films consist of thin crystalline lamellae where chains are either parallel or perpendicular to the substrate. The relative amount of both types of lamellae changes systematically with film thickness, substrate attraction, and crystallization temperature; thicker films on substrates of higher attraction comprise dominant parallel lamellae, while thinner films on substrates of weaker attraction prefer the perpendicular lamellae. A clue to the morphogenesis is suggested to be the marked preference of the chain ends to locate on the free surface and on the effectively repulsive substrate. It is also shown that the perpendicular crystals, both on the free surface and on the solid substrate, have melting points higher than that of the bulk.
We investigated the effects of lipid geometry on vesicle division using coarse grained molecular dynamics simulations. When the vesicle is composed of zero and negative spontaneous curvature lipids (ZSLs and NSLs), the difference in their molecular spontaneous curvatures destabilizes the neck of the limiting shape vesicle. In the vesicle division pathway, the neck developed into the stalk intermediates. The stalk was broken when the NSLs were expelled from the stalk. Free energy analysis shows that the coupling between the lipid geometry and the Gaussian rigidity is responsible for the observed vesicle division.
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