Abstract

The influence of a high average electric field (∼1 V/nm) in the hydrophobic interior of a bilayer lipid membrane on short-wavelength in-plane phononic motions of lipid chains is considered. The average electric field is assumed to be nearly constant on a picosecond time scale and a nanometer length scale. This field may be induced, for instance, by externally applied subnanosecond electric pulses or the membrane dipole potential. Using a generalized hydrodynamic approach, we derive a corresponding electrohydrodynamic model generalized to high wave numbers. In the considered approximation, all electric field effects are reduced only to a constant contribution to the generalized isothermal compressibility modulus. The corresponding dynamic structure factor for a lipid bilayer is derived. We show that due to polarization effects, the high field can critically impact the dynamics of longitudinal acousticlike modes at wave numbers near the major peak of the static structure factor. We estimate quantitatively that for typical lipid bilayers, transverse high electric fields can cause strong phonon energy softening, enhancement of phonon population, and formation of a gap in the dispersion of excitation frequency. The results obtained agree with simulations of the initiation of lipid bilayer electropores, suggesting that the proposed model reproduces the essential features of the field's impact on atomic density fluctuations. The proposed mechanism may have significant implications for the understanding of electroporation, passive molecular transport, and spontaneous pore formation in lipid bilayers.

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