Abstract

To what spatial extent does a single lipid affect the mechanical properties of the membrane that surrounds it? The lipid composition of a membrane determines its mechanical properties. The shapes available to the membrane depend on its compositional material properties, and therefore, the lipid environment. Because each individual lipid species' chemistry is different, it is important to know its range of influence on membrane mechanical properties. This is defined herein as the lipid's mechanical extent. Here, a lipid's mechanical extent is determined by quantifying lipid redistribution and the average curvature that lipid species experience on fluctuating membrane surfaces. A surprising finding is that, unlike unsaturated lipids, saturated lipids have a complicated, nonlocal effect on the surrounding surface, with the interaction strength maximal at a finite length-scale. The methodology provides the means to substantially enrich curvature-energy models of membrane structures, quantifying what was previously only conjecture.

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