Abstract

Lipid droplets (LDs) are cytosolic organelles that protrude from the endoplasmic reticulum membrane under energy-rich conditions. How an LD buds off from the endoplasmic reticulum bilayer is still elusive. By using a continuous media description, we computed the morphology of a lipid droplet embedded in between two identical monolayers of a bilayer. We found that beyond a critical volume, the droplet morphology abruptly transits from a symmetrical elongated lens to a spherical protrusion. This budding transition does not require any energy-consuming machinery, or curvature-inducing agent, or intrinsic asymmetry of the bilayer; it is solely driven by the large interfacial energy of the LD, as opposed to the bilayer surface tension. This spontaneous budding mechanism gives key insights on cellular LD formation.

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