A tutorial for mesoscale computer simulations of lipid membranes: tether pulling, tubulation and fluctuations

Abstract

Lipid membranes and membrane deformations are a long-standing area of research in soft matter and biophysics. Computer simulations have complemented analytical and experimental approaches as one of the pillars in the field. However, setting up and using membrane simulations can come with barriers due to the multidisciplinary effort involved and the vast choice of existing simulations models. In this review, we introduce the non-expert reader to coarse-grained membrane simulations (CGMS) at the mesoscale. Firstly, we give a concise overview of the modelling approaches to study fluid membranes, together with guidance to more specialized references. Secondly, we provide a conceptual guide on how to develop CGMS. Lastly, we construct a hands-on tutorial on how to apply CGMS, by providing a pedagogical examination of tether pulling, tubulation and fluctuations with three different membrane models, and discussing them in terms of their scope and how resource-intensive they are. To ease the reader’s venture into the field, we provide a repository with ready-to-run tutorials.

Article information

Article type
Tutorial Review
Submitted
12 Feb 2025
Accepted
21 Jul 2025
First published
28 Jul 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Soft Matter, 2025, Accepted Manuscript

A tutorial for mesoscale computer simulations of lipid membranes: tether pulling, tubulation and fluctuations

M. Muñoz Basagoiti, F. Frey, B. Meadowcroft, M. Amaral, A. Prada and A. Saric, Soft Matter, 2025, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5SM00148J

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