Abstract

The function of biological membranes is controlled by the interaction of the fluid lipid bilayer with various proteins, some of which induce or react to curvature. These proteins can preferentially bind or diffuse towards curved regions of the membrane, induce or stabilize membrane curvature and sequester membrane area into protein-rich curved domains. The resulting tight interplay between mechanics and chemistry is thought to control organelle morphogenesis and dynamics, including traffic, membrane mechanotransduction, or membrane area regulation and tension buffering. Despite all these processes are fundamentally dynamical, previous work has largely focused on equilibrium and a self-consistent theoretical treatment of the dynamics of curvature sensing and generation has been lacking. Here, we develop a general theoretical and computational framework based on a nonlinear Onsager’s formalism of irreversible thermodynamics for the dynamics of curved proteins and membranes. We develop variants of the model, one of which accounts for membrane curving by asymmetric crowding of bulky off-membrane protein domains. As illustrated by a selection of test cases, the resulting governing equations and numerical simulations provide a foundation to understand the dynamics of curvature sensing, curvature generation, and more generally membrane curvature mechano-chemistry.

Highlights

  • Animal life is characterized by a hierarchical compartmentalization into separate functional units delimited by interfaces

  • We have presented a nonlinear and self-consistent continuum model for the dynamics of membranes interacting with curved proteins

  • Our theory describes a biologically important instance of chemo-mechanical self-organization leading to surface shape dynamics, which coexists in cells with alternative shape patterning mechanisms [96]

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Summary

September 2019

Any further distribution of this work must maintain various proteins, some of which induce or react to curvature. Mechanics and chemistry is thought to control organelle morphogenesis and dynamics, including traffic, membrane mechanotransduction, or membrane area regulation and tension buffering. Despite all these processes are fundamentally dynamical, previous work has largely focused on equilibrium and a self-consistent theoretical treatment of the dynamics of curvature sensing and generation has been lacking. We develop a general theoretical and computational framework based on a nonlinear Onsager’s formalism of irreversible thermodynamics for the dynamics of curved proteins and membranes.

Introduction
Balance of mass
Dissipation
Governing equations
In-plane force balance
Boundary conditions
Axisymmetric formulation and numerical approximation
Results
Sensing on a tube and shape stabilization
Two alternative models of membrane-protein interaction
Conclusions
Full Text
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