Simon
Christ
a,
Thomas
Litschel
b,
Petra
Schwille
b and
Reinhard
Lipowsky
*a
aTheory and Bio-Systems, Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces, 14424 Potsdam, Germany. E-mail: lipowsky@mpikg.mpg.de; Fax: +49 331 5679602; Tel: +49 331 5679600
bCellular and Molecular Biophysics Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry, 82152 Martinsried, Germany
First published on 7th September 2020
Reaction-diffusion systems encapsulated within giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) can lead to shape oscillations of these vesicles as recently observed for the bacterial Min protein system. This system contains two Min proteins, MinD and MinE, which periodically attach to and detach from the GUV membranes, with the detachment being driven by ATP hydrolysis. Here, we address these shape oscillations within the theoretical framework of curvature elasticity and show that they can be understood in terms of a spontaneous curvature that changes periodically with time. We focus on the simplest case provided by a attachment–detachment kinetics that is laterally uniform along the membrane. During each oscillation cycle, the vesicle shape is transformed from a symmetric dumbbell with two subcompartments of equal size to an asymmetric dumbbell with two subcompartments of different size, followed by the reverse, symmetry-restoring transformation. This sequence of shapes is first analyzed within the spontaneous curvature model which is then extended to the area-difference-elasticity model by decomposing the spontaneous curvature into a local and nonlocal component. For both symmetric and asymmetric dumbbells, the two subcompartments are connected by a narrow membrane neck with a circular waistline. The radius of this waistline undergoes periodic oscillations, the time dependence of which can be reasonably well fitted by a single Fourier mode with an average time period of 56 s.
In a recent experimental study, the Min protein system was encapsulated within GUVs which were then observed to undergo cyclic shape oscillations.6 The protein system contained two Min proteins, MinD and MinE, which periodically attach to and detach from the inner leaflet of the GUV membranes. MinD attaches to lipid membranes when bound to ATP.7,8 MinE binds to membrane-bound MinD-ATP and the resulting MinD-ATP-MinE complex stimulates ATP hydrolysis by MinD, causing both proteins to unbind again from the membrane.
Here, we address these shape oscillations within the theoretical framework of curvature elasticity as recently reviewed in ref. 9. We first focus on the spontaneous curvature model10–12 and show that the vesicle shape oscillations can be understood in terms of a preferred or spontaneous membrane curvature that changes periodically in time. The spontaneous curvature provides a quantitative measure for the molecular asymmetry between the two leaflets of the lipid bilayers. For the GUV membranes considered here, only the inner leaflets are exposed to the Min proteins and the resulting bilayer asymmetry will depend on the coverage of the inner leaflet by these proteins. Because this coverage changes with time, so does the resulting bilayer asymmetry and the associated spontaneous curvature. In addition, we generalize the spontaneous curvature model and consider the area-difference-elasticity (ADE) model13–15 to take into account that the lipid bilayers studied in ref. 6 were composed of two phospholipids that are not expected to undergo frequent flip-flops between the two bilayer leaflets.
In the absence of flip-flops, the number of lipids is conserved separately in each leaflet of the bilayer membrane, which implies that the area difference between the two leaflets has a preferred value. In the ADE model, this constraint is taken into account by a nonlocal term that is added to the membrane's local bending energy, which has the same form as in the spontaneous curvature model. Therefore, in the present paper, we will view the area-difference-elasticity model as a generalization of the spontaneous curvature model.9,15 Alternatively, one may start from the bilayer coupling model,16 which considers the area difference between the two bilayers as another geometric control parameter in addition to membrane area and vesicle volume, and regard the ADE model as a generalized bilayer coupling model.17
As far as the recent experiments6 are concerned, we focus on the simplest case in which the cyclic changes of the membrane fluorescence were observed to be laterally uniform, corresponding to a laterally uniform attachment–detachment kinetics of the Min proteins. Furthermore, our detailed analysis of the observed shape oscillations as described here reveals that the GUVs conserve both vesicle volume and membrane area during these oscillations. As a consequence, the vesicle shapes are calculated for constant volume-to-area ratio and a laterally uniform spontaneous curvature that changes periodically in time. Furthermore, for each time point, we determine the (meta)stable GUV shape(s) corresponding to the instantaneous value of the spontaneous curvature.
These GUV shapes exhibit two subcompartments which are connected by narrow membrane necks as displayed in Fig. 1 and 2. These membrane necks are a direct consequence of curvature elasticity9,12,18,19 and have been experimentally observed for a variety of lipid compositions.20,21 More recently, it was shown that these necks are essential for the formation of multispherical vesicle shapes22 and for the controlled division of GUVs into two daughter vesicles.23In vivo, membrane necks are also formed by cellular membranes, e.g., during endo- and exocytosis.24
Fig. 1 Symmetry-breaking transformation during one shape oscillation: comparison of experimentally observed vesicle shapes in (a–c) with theoretically calculated shapes in (d–f). The neck radius Rne attains its largest value of 1.17 μm in (a and d) and its smallest value of 0.12 μm in (c and f). The up-down symmetry of the symmetric dumbbells (blue shape contours) in (a and d) and (b and e) is broken for the asymmetric dumbbell (red shape contour) in (c and f). The three images in panels a–c were obtained by differential interference contrast microscopy6 and represent three subsequent frames of the time-lapse Movie 1 (ESI†). The dashed vertical lines in panels d–f represent axes of rotational symmetry. |
Fig. 2 Symmetry-restoring transformation during one shape oscillation: comparison of experimentally observed vesicle shapes in (a–c) with theoretically calculated shapes in (d–f). The neck radius Rne attains its smallest value of 0.12 μm in (a and d) and its largest value of 0.95 μm in (c and f). The up-down symmetry is broken for the red shapes in (a and d) and (b and e) but restored for the blue shape in (c and f). The asymmetric shape in (a and d) is the same shape as in Fig. 1c and f but flipped upside-down. The three images in panels a–c represent three subsequent frames of the time-lapse Movie 1 (ESI†). |
Fig. 3 Morphology diagram of prolates and dumbbells for positive spontaneous curvature with 0.7 ≤ ≤ 2.8 and volume-to-area ratio v ≥ 0.6. The horizontal line with v = 1 corresponds to a single sphere. Along the solid line L1+1, the vesicles form limit shapes consisting of two different spheres connected by a closed membrane neck. The location of this line is given by the algebraic expression in eqn (8). Along the solid line L2* with and , the vesicles consist of two equally sized spheres connected by a closed neck. The parameter region between the two lines L1+1 and L2* defines the yellow stability regime for (1 + 1)-spheres, in which the vesicle shape depends only on v but is independent of . The black dotted line Dpear separates up-down symmetric from asymmetric dumbbells with open necks. The latter line is obtained using cubic splines to connect numerical and analytical solutions. The solid blue and red circles correspond to shapes with v = 0.768 as displayed in Fig. 4a, the solid red and blue squares to shapes with as in Fig. 4b. The solid blue and red diamonds with v = 0.670 represent the selected shapes in Fig. 1 and 2 with the parameter values as in Table 2. The symmetric (blue) and asymmetric (red) diamonds belong to two different energy branches, see Fig. 6 and 7 further below. |
A priori, our theoretical approach can be justified by the observed separation of time scales between the time period of the Min oscillations, which is about one minute,25,26 and the time it takes a giant vesicle to relax to a new stable state, which takes only a few seconds.27,28 Because of this time scale separation, one should be able to describe the observed non-equilibrium shape transformations by a sequence of stable shapes corresponding to the instantaneous value of the spontaneous curvature. Such a description is indeed possible as shown here.
During each complete oscillation cycle, the vesicle shape is transformed from an up-down symmetric dumbbell with two subcompartments of equal size to an asymmetric dumbbell with two subcompartments of different size, see Fig. 1, followed by the reverse, symmetry-restoring transformation, see Fig. 2. In these two figures, the symmetric and asymmetric dumbbells are displayed in blue and red color, respectively. This color code will be used throughout the paper. These two types of dumbbells belong to two different branches of the GUV's bending energy. In the spontaneous curvature model, the symmetric branch is stable whereas the asymmetric one is metastable. In the area-difference-elasticity model, both branches represent stable shapes.
The narrow membrane necks in Fig. 1 and 2 have a waistline that defines the neck radius Rne. This neck radius changes during each shape oscillation as shown in the two figures. In the spontaneous curvature model, the neck radius exhibits a different dependence on the spontaneous curvature for the symmetric and asymmetric branches of dumbbells: along the symmetric branch, the neck radius decreases with increasing whereas it increases along the asymmetric dumbbell. In the area-difference-elasticity model, the neck radius decreases with increasing local spontaneous curvature, both along the symmetric and along the asymmetric branch.
Our article is organized as follows. In the next section, we briefly describe our experimental system, consisting of Min proteins encapsulated in GUVs, as experimentally studied in ref. 6. The following section contains a reminder about the theory of curvature elasticity. We will first use the spontaneous curvature model, for which the GUV shapes are solely determined by two dimensionless shape parameters, the volume-to-area ratio v and the rescaled spontaneous curvature . We then analyze the experimentally observed shapes as shown in Fig. 1a–c and 2a–c and conclude that these shapes have constant volume-to-area ratio which we will take to be v = 0.670. For this v-value, we study the possible vesicle shapes as we vary the spontaneous curvature and find both symmetric and asymmetric dumbbells for a certain range of -values. In Section 4.6, we extend the spontaneous curvature model to the area-difference-elasticity model by decomposing the spontaneous curvature into a local and a nonlocal component.
MinD can bind ATP and then attaches onto lipid membranes.7 MinE binds to membrane-bound MinD-ATP and the resulting MinD-ATP-MinE complex stimulates ATP hydrolysis by MinD, causing both proteins to desorb again from the membrane. In the presence of a sufficient amount of ATP, this MinDE system undergoes many cycles of membrane attachment and detachment. For osmotically deflated vesicles, this periodic molecular process leads to shape oscillations of the vesicles which can be directly observed in the optical microscope.6 Different types of shape oscillations have been detected; the two most frequent types of oscillations were denoted by ‘periodic dumbbell splitting’ and ‘periodic budding’ in ref. 6.
Here, we will focus on the dumbbell case as displayed in Fig. 1 and 2. In this case, the fluorescence of the GFP-labeled MinD adjacent to the inner leaflet of the GUV membrane was observed to be laterally uniform. Therefore, membrane segments with a lateral extension of about 300 nm can be considered to have a laterally uniform molecular composition which implies that they have uniform elastic properties as well. Furthermore, it is well understood that the shape of uniform GUV membranes strongly depends on the preferred or spontaneous curvature of these membranes.9
The spontaneous curvature model9,10–12 is then defined by the membrane's bending energy as given by‡
(1) |
In order to actually compute the shape of a GUV, we need to take two additional constraints into account as provided by the membrane area A and the vesicle volume V.9,11,12 These constraints are included via two Lagrange multipliers, the mechanical membrane tension Σ and the difference ΔP ≡ Pin − Pex between the pressures Pin and Pex within the interior and exterior aqueous solutions. The stable membrane shapes, corresponding to minimal bending energy, are then obtained by minimizing the shape energy
F = −ΔPV + ΣA + Ebe | (2) |
(3) |
(4) |
= mRve. | (5) |
In the following, we will discuss the stable vesicle shapes in the context of two-dimensional morphology diagrams that depend on the two independent shape parameters v and . By definition, the volume parameter v satisfies
0 ≤ v ≤ 1 with v = 1 for a single sphere. | (6) |
It is important to note that the stable GUV shapes depend on the two shape parameters v and but are not uniquely determined by these two parameters alone. Indeed, for given values of v and , the vesicle can usually attain several (meta)stable shapes that form distinct branches of the bending energy.12 The number of distinct branches becomes particularly large when one considers multispherical shapes consisting of a variable number of small and large spheres.9,22
The closure of a narrow membrane neck as obtained from a smoothly curved shape is somewhat counterintuitive. When viewed on molecular scales, the membrane neck has the shape of an hourglass. The corresponding waistline consists of saddle points, characterized by two principal curvatures, the negative contour curvature C1,wl < 0 perpendicular to the waistline and the positive principal curvature C2,wl = 1/Rne > 0 parallel to the waistline. When the neck closes, the neck radius goes to zero and the principal curvature C2,wl diverges. However, the mean curvature
(7) |
The simplest multispherical shape is provided by (1 + 1)-spheres consisting of two spheres connected by a closed membrane neck. The corresponding stability regime for this morphology is displayed in Fig. 3 as the yellow subregion. This regime is bounded by two lines of limit shapes denoted by L1+1 and L2*. Approaching the line L1+1 from outside the stability regime, the closure of the membrane neck leads to asymmetric dumbbells consisting of a large and a small sphere with two different radii. Approaching the line L2* from outside the stability regime, the closure of the membrane neck leads to symmetric dumbbells consisting of two equally sized spheres. The process of neck closure is illustrated in Fig. 4 for asymmetric dumbbells with v = 0.768 and for symmetric dumbbells with .
Fig. 4 Examples for dumbbell shapes with open and closed necks: (a) Dumbbells with v = 0.768, corresponding to the three solid circles in Fig. 3. From left to right, these shapes have the rescaled spontaneous curvatures = 1.2, 1.3 and ≥1.56, where the rightmost shape corresponds to the limit shape L1+1 with v = 0.768; (b) Dumbbells with corresponding to the three solid squares in Fig. 3. From left to right, these shapes have the spontaneous curvature = 1.167, 1.352, and . |
The line L1+1 is described by the functional relationship12
(8) |
The line L2* is located at9
(9) |
In Fig. 3, we also included the dotted line Dpear at which the vesicle undergoes a discontinuous transition from up-down symmetric to up-down asymmetric dumbbells with open necks.12 Along the transition line Dpear, the two types of dumbbells have the same bending energy.
The partial morphology diagram displayed in Fig. 3 contains additional stability regimes for multispheres consisting of Nl large spheres and Ns small spheres with Nl + Ns ≥ 3. Such (Nl + Ns)-spheres have been observed for cholesterol-containing membranes which were exposed to asymmetric sugar solutions.22 The general theoretical method to determine these multispheres has been developed in ref. 9 and has been used to determine their stability regimes within the spontaneous curvature model.22
Lines of multispherical limit shapes with up to Nl + Ns = 3 shapes were also obtained in the bilayer coupling model12,16,17 and within the area-difference-elasticity model.29 A graphical method to determine the shapes in the area-difference-elasticity model from those in the bilayer coupling model has also been described.17
However, in what follows, we will not consider (Nl + Ns)-spheres with Nl + Ns ≥ 3 because the experimentally observed vesicle shapes with v = 0.670 as displayed in Fig. 1 and 2 involve only two subcompartments connected by a narrow membrane neck, in close analogy to the (1 + 1)-spheres, which are formed for somewhat larger v-values with , i.e., at and above the line L2* displayed in Fig. 3 and described by eqn (9).
All individual snapshots of Movie 1 (ESI†) are consistent with the view that the observed shapes represent essentially axisymmetric shapes that are tilted with respect to the focal plane and are deformed by relative displacements of the two subcompartments with respect to the closed membrane neck, which acts as a flexible hinge. The two shape sequences in Fig. 1a–c and 2a–c have been selected because they can be well approximated by axisymmetric shapes without additional deformations arising from relative displacements around the hinge-like membrane neck.
During the observed shape changes, both the membrane area and the volume of the GUVs were essentially conserved. These properties were explicitly demonstrated for the six snapshots in Fig. 1a–c and 2a–c by fitting splines to the shape contours of these images, assuming rotational symmetry of the shapes, and then measuring the membrane area A and the vesicle volume V as well as the neck radius Rne.30,31 The numerical estimates for these geometric quantities are given in Table 1 which also displays the resulting volume-to-area ratio v = 0.670 ± 0.01. The latter value implies that the vesicle has been significantly deflated, compared to a spherical shape with v = 1, by the osmotic pressure arising from the hypertonic conditions in the exterior aqueous solution.6
A [μm2] | V [μm3] | v | R ne [μm] | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Fig. 1a | 390 ± 30 | 490 ± 60 | 0.68 ± 0.01 | 1.1 ± 0.2 |
Fig. 1b | 380 ± 30 | 470 ± 60 | 0.68 ± 0.01 | 0.8 ± 0.2 |
Fig. 1c | 380 ± 30 | 460 ± 50 | 0.66 ± 0.02 | <0.3 |
Fig. 2a | 380 ± 30 | 470 ± 53 | 0.67 ± 0.01 | <0.3 |
Fig. 2b | 380 ± 30 | 463 ± 52 | 0.68 ± 0.01 | 0.6 ± 0.2 |
Fig. 2c | 380 ± 30 | 483 ± 55 | 0.68 ± 0.01 | 0.9 ± 0.2 |
The theoretical shapes in Fig. 1d–f and 2d–f were then calculated using the volume-to-area ratio v = 0.670 and several values of the rescaled spontaneous curvature as given in Table 2 and displayed in the morphology diagram of Fig. 3. Furthermore, to obtain the dimensionful quantities from the dimensionless ones, we used the vesicle size μm as obtained from the area A = 390 μm2 of the image in Fig. 1a, see first row in Table 1.
Fig. 5 Symmetric dumbbell shapes (blue) for constant volume-to-area ratio v = 0.670 and rescaled spontaneous curvature as given by the numerals below the shapes. The first three shapes correspond to the blue diamonds in Fig. 3. This sequence of shapes illustrates the closure of the membrane neck along the symmetric branch as we increase the value of the spontaneous curvature from 1.18 to 2.27. |
In contrast, the asymmetric dumbbells with an open neck as in Fig. 1f and 2d, e are only found for a relatively small range of -values. Indeed, when we start from a certain asymmetric dumbbell and increase the spontaneous curvature, the resulting dumbbells become more and more symmetric until we reach the bifurcation point Bop, which is provided by a symmetric dumbbell with an open neck and has spontaneous curvature (Bop). At the latter -value, the asymmetric branch merges with the symmetric one and the asymmetric branch ceases to exist for > (Bop).
On the other hand, when we decrease the spontaneous curvature, the neck radius of the asymmetric dumbbell becomes smaller and smaller until we reach the limit shape Lps with a closed neck for spontaneous curvature (Lps). The closed neck of this limit shape connects a spherical with a prolate subcompartment. Therefore, the branch of stable asymmetric dumbbells with an open neck is limited to those values of the spontaneous curvature that satisfy
(Lps) < < (Bop). | (10) |
Fig. 6 Up-down symmetric (blue) and asymmetric (red) dumbbells for v = 0.670 and five values of the rescaled spontaneous curvature as indicated by the numerals below the shapes. The asymmetric dumbbells with = 1.89 and 1.93 correspond to the red diamonds in Fig. 3. The two types of shapes coexist between = 1.89 and = 1.933. For = 1.94, only the symmetric shape is found which implies that the asymmetric branch merges with the symmetric one at a critical value of the spontaneous curvature slightly above = 1.933. Comparison of the asymmetric and symmetric shapes reveals that the asymmetric shapes approach the symmetric ones in a continuous manner as we increase the spontaneous curvature towards its critical value. This conclusion is further corroborated by the corresponding energy branches in Fig. 7. Note that the neck radius of the asymmetric (red) dumbbells increases with increasing , in contrast to the behavior of the symmetric (blue) dumbbells. For more details on the dependence of the dumbbell shapes on the spontaneous curvature, see Movie 2 (ESI†). |
Fig. 7 Rescaled bending energy Ēbe = Ebe/(8πκ) as a function of rescaled spontaneous curvature for volume-to-area ratio v = 0.670. The Ēbe-values are displayed in blue for the symmetric dumbbells and in red for the asymmetric ones. The inset shows the energy difference ΔEbe between the metastable asymmetric and the stable symmetric branch, as defined in eqn (12). The asymmetric branch (red) has a slightly larger bending energy than the symmetric branch (blue). Therefore, the asymmetric branch represents a branch of metastable shapes. The two branches merge with a common tangent at a critical -value slightly above = 1.933, see Fig. 6. The symmetric branch exhibits a pronounced minimum at = 1.373 which reflects the vicinity of the corner point with and , at which the bending energy vanishes, see the morphology diagram in Fig. 3. |
It follows from the dumbbell shapes in Fig. 6 that the spontaneous curvature (Bop), at which the asymmetric branch merges with the symmetric one, is somewhat larger than = 1.933. Furthermore, the asymmetric dumbbell with = 1.89 must be quite close to the limit shape Lps because the membrane neck of the latter dumbbell is almost closed and the smaller subcompartment has already an essentially spherical shape. To estimate the spontaneous curvature (Lps) for the prolate-sphere limit shape, we compute the mean curvature Mnpol at the north pole of the asymmetric dumbbells and the mean curvature Mspol at the south pole of these dumbbells. As we approach the limit shape Lps, the rescaled mean curvatures npol ≡ MnpolRve and spol ≡ MspolRve should satisfy the asymptotic equality
npol + spol ≈ 2(Lps), | (11) |
Fig. 8 Rescaled radius ne = Rne/Rve of membrane neck as a function of spontaneous curvature for v = 0.670: (a) computed variation of the neck radius along the symmetric (blue) and asymmetric (red) dumbbell branches. The corresponding shapes are displayed in Fig. 6 and Movie 2 (ESI†). As we increase the spontaneous curvature , the neck radius decreases along the symmetric but increases along the asymmetric branch. The red star indicates the estimate ≃ 1.84 for the spontaneous curvature of the prolate-sphere limit shape Lps with ne = 0; (b) evolution of neck radius and spontaneous curvature for the three shapes in Fig. 1 that describe the symmetry-breaking transformation; and (c) evolution of neck radius and spontaneous curvature for the three shapes in Fig. 2 that describe the symmetry-restoring transformation. The error bars of the neck radius correspond to the uncertainty of the neck radius as obtained by approximating the experimental shape contours in Fig. 1a–c and 2a–c with splines, truncated at the bifurcation point and the threshold of the optical resolution. The error bars of the spontaneous curvature correspond to the resulting uncertainty of the spontaneous curvature given the non-linear shape of the curve. The horizontal dotted lines represent the optical resolution limit of 300 nm. |
ΔĒbe ≡ (Ēasybe − Ēsybe)/(8πκ) | (12) |
In the spontaneous curvature model, the bending energy difference ΔĒbe displayed in the inset of Fig. 7 is always positive, i.e., the asymmetric branch has an increased bending energy compared to the symmetric one. Further below, we will consider the area-difference-elasticity model and study the bending energies as a function of the local spontaneous curvature mloc. In the latter case, the branch of asymmetric shapes has a lower bending energy and, thus, becomes the stable state of minimal bending energy.
In Fig. 8a, we display the rescaled neck radius
(13) |
We identify neck closure events to be provided by those frames that display a closed neck and are directly preceded by a frame with an open neck. Furthermore, a complete shape oscillation is defined by the sequence of Δi frames between two successive closure events. Such a sequence consists of a subseries of three to four successive images with closed necks, followed by a subseries of three to four successive images with open necks. Movie 1 (ESI†) displays 191 frames between the first and the last closure event, which form 26 complete shape oscillations. Thus, the average number of frames, 〈Δi〉, per complete shape oscillation is equal to 191/26 = 7.35 frames and the average time period for one complete oscillation is given by 〈Δi〉Δt = 7.35 × 7.61 s = 55.9 s, which is similar to the cycle time observed for Min oscillations in other compartments.25,26
Most of the 26 complete shape oscillations consist of 7 or 8 successive images or frames. The 7-frame oscillations are observed 15 times, the 8-frame oscillations 10 times. In addition, we observe one complete oscillation with only 6 successive frames. Thus, including these statistical fluctuations, we obtain the estimate
Δi = 〈Δi〉 ± 1 = 7.35 ± 1 |
The theoretical shapes in Fig. 1 and 2 were obtained for the parameter values in Table 2. The resulting time-dependence of the spontaneous curvature is shown in Fig. 9 where we plot versus the frame index i which corresponds to the time
t = (i − 1)Δt = (i − 1) × 7.61 s | (14) |
Fig. 9 Rescaled spontaneous curvature versus frame index i. The frame i was taken at time t = (i − 1) × 7.61 s after the initial frame with index i = 1. The blue data points correspond to up-down symmetric dumbbell shapes, the red data points to asymmetric ones. The symmetry-breaking transformation in Fig. 1 corresponds to i = 1, 2, and 3, the symmetry-restoring transformation in Fig. 2 to i = 68, 69, and 70. The image i = 4 displays a slightly distorted version of i = 3 and is thus taken to have the same -value as i = 3. The image i = 71 displays a symmetric dumbbell with an increased neck radius compared to i = 70. This increased radius implies the spontaneous curvature = 1.32. The combined sequence of all eight images represents one complete shape oscillation with an average time period of 55.9 s. The error bars are obtained as in Fig. 8. |
Fig. 10 Rescaled neck radius neversus frame index i corresponding to time t = (i − 1) × 7.61 s. Direct inspection of the frame with index i = 71 leads to the neck radius ne = 0.189 for this image. The combined sequence of all eight images represents one complete shape oscillation which takes, on average, 55.9 s. The color code of the data points is the same as in Fig. 9. The trigonometric curve (dashed black line) through the data provides the best fit to a single Fourier mode as parametrized by eqn (15). The error bars are obtained as in Fig. 8. |
Because of the relatively large error bars for the data in Fig. 10, depicting the time-dependence of the neck radius ne, it is difficult to fit these data in a quantitative manner. The presumably simplest fit is provided by a single Fourier mode of the form
ne = a + bcos[2π(i − 1)/7], | (15) |
In the absence of flip-flops, each leaflet has a fixed number of lipids which generates an additional constraint on the area difference between the two leaflets. This area difference is proportional to the integrated (or total) mean curvature
(16) |
When we include the constraint on the area difference and, thus, the integrated mean curvature, we arrive at the area-difference-elasticity (ADE) model with the energy13–15
EADE = Ebe′ + DADE | (17) |
(18) |
(19) |
The second bending rigidity κΔ is, in general, difficult to determine but is typically comparable to κ.14 In order to eliminate one parameter, we will focus on the case with κΔ equal to κ. The reference value IM,0, on the other hand, can be estimated from the integrated mean curvatures of the six shapes displayed in Fig. 1 and 2. The resulting numerical values of the dimensionless quantity ĪM = IM/Rve are displayed in Table 3. The best estimate for the reference value IM,0 ≡ x is now obtained by minimizing the root-mean-square deviation
(20) |
(21) |
The stationary shapes of the area-difference-elasticity model are also stationary shapes of the spontaneous curvature model13–15 provided we use the identification9,15
m = mloc + mnlo or = loc + nlo | (22) |
with the nonlocal spontaneous curvature
(23) |
The rescaled ADE energy is now given by
(24) |
(25) |
(26) |
The ADE model depends on four dimensionless parameters: the volume-to-area ratio v, the local spontaneous curvature loc, the reference value ĪM,0 of the integrated mean curvature, and the rigidity ratio κΔ/κ. For the fixed parameter values v = 0.670, ĪM,0 = 17.63, and κΔ/κ = 1, we are left with only one dimensionless parameter, the local spontaneous curvature loc. Within the ADE model, this latter parameter depends on the amount of Min proteins bound to the inner leaflet of GUV membrane. The time-dependent oscillation of the local spontaneous curvature loc is displayed in Fig. S2 (ESI†). Comparison with the time dependence of in Fig. 9 shows that, in contrast to , the local curvature loc decreases monotonically during the symmetry restoring transformation between frame 68 and 70.
The dependence of the ADE energies on loc is displayed in Fig. 11. Note that the ADE energy of the asymmetric branch is now below the energy of the symmetric one and that the energy difference
ΔĒADE = ĒasyADE − ĒsyADE | (27) |
Fig. 11 Integrated mean curvature and different energy contributions in the ADE model as functions of the local spontaneous curvature loc for rigidity ratio κΔ/κ = 1. The symmetric and asymmetric branches are displayed as blue and red lines, respectively: (a) Integrated mean curvature ĪM as in eqn (16); (b) Nonlocal area-difference-elasticity term ADE as in eqn (26); (c) local bending energy Ēbe′ as in eqn (25); and (d) ADE energy ĒADE which is equal to the sum of the local and nonlocal terms in panels b and c. In contrast to the spontaneous curvature model, see Fig. 7, the energy of the asymmetric branch is now below the energy of the symmetric one. All quantities were computed for volume-to-area ratio v = 0.670 and reference value ĪM,0 = 17.63 of the integrated mean curvature. |
Surprisingly, these shape oscillations were found to involve two energy branches of the vesicle membrane, corresponding to up-down symmetric and up-down asymmetric dumbbells, see Fig. 6 and 7. The latter two figures imply that the two branches merge in a continuous manner. During each complete shape oscillation, the vesicle morphology undergoes a symmetry-breaking transformation (Fig. 1) at which an up-down symmetric dumbbell with two subcompartments of equal size transforms into an up-down asymmetric dumbbell with two subcompartments of different sizes, followed by the reverse, symmetry-restoring transformation (Fig. 2). In the spontaneous curvature model, the bending energy of the asymmetric branch exceeds the bending energy of the symmetric one (Fig. 7).
The phospholipids studied in ref. 6 are unlikely to undergo frequent flip-flops between the two leaflets of the bilayer membranes. To take this absence of flip-flops into account, we extended the spontaneous curvature model to the area-difference-elasticity (ADE) model by decomposing the spontaneous curvature into a local and a nonlocal component, see eqn (22) and (23). In the ADE model, the attachment–detachment kinetics of the Min proteins leads to variations of the local spontaneous curvature loc as given in Table 3 for the observed shapes in Fig. 1 and 2. Furthermore, the branch of asymmetric dumbbells is now located below the branch of symmetric ones, both for κΔ/κ = 1 (Fig. 11) and for κΔ/κ = 2 (Fig. S3, ESI†). Therefore, both the symmetric and the asymmetric dumbbells that have been observed experimentally (Fig. 1 and 2) are likely to represent stable shapes of minimal bending energy.
The branch of asymmetric dumbbell shapes observed here involves a prolate-sphere limit shape Lps, consisting of a prolate and a spherical subcompartment which are connected by a closed membrane neck. In the present study, we studied the volume-to-area ratio v = 0.670 for which we obtained the estimate (Lps) ≃ 1.84 for the spontaneous curvature at which this limit shape Lps is formed. Such prolate-sphere limit shapes are expected to be stable within a whole region of the morphology diagram as defined by the two shape parameters v and , in close analogy to the stability regime for the two-sphere vesicles in Fig. 3. For the prolate-sphere limit shapes, the corresponding stability regime remains to be determined and will add another layer to the morphological complexity of vesicle shapes.
One unexpected outcome of our analysis is that the coupling of membrane curvature to active processes can reveal new branches of vesicle shapes that have not been observed before. In the present study, such shapes are provided by asymmetric dumbbells with volume-to-area ratio . Thus, it should be rather interesting to extend our study, both experimentally and theoretically, to different values of v and to see whether or not the Min-induced shape oscillations typically involve distinct branches of (meta)stable shapes.
Finally, in the present study, the two subcompartments of the GUVs were always connected by a narrow membrane neck. From the theoretical point of view, a sufficiently large spontaneous curvature can cleave such a neck by curvature-induced constriction forces,9 as recently demonstrated for GUVs that were exposed to His-tagged proteins.23 Therefore, an interesting and challenging objective for future studies is to cleave these necks by combining the Min proteins studied here with other curvature-generating molecules.
Footnotes |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Supplementary text on shape equations for and numerical computation of axisymmetric vesicle shapes; Fig. S1 with parametrization of shape contours; Fig. S2 with time dependence of local spontaneous curvature; Fig. S3 for ADE model with κΔ/κ = 2; captions of Movie 1 and Movie 2; Movie 1 with observed vesicle shapes; Movie 2 with computed vesicle shapes. See DOI: 10.1039/d0sm00790k |
‡ Strictly speaking, the expression in eqn (1) is the bending energy functional that is defined for an arbitrary vesicle shape and should be distinguished from the bending energy as obtained for a certain stable shape. For notational simplicity, we will ignore this distinction here. |
§ The dimensionless integrated mean curvature ĪM is related to the dimensionless area difference Δa as discussed in ref. 12, 16 and 17 by ĪM = 4πΔa. |
¶ In ref. 17, the prefactor π in eqn (19) is combined with the second bending rigidity κΔ to define the nonlocal bending energy κr ≡ πκΔ. |
|| All barred curvatures are dimensionless and obtained from the unbarred ones by multiplication with the basic length scale Rve. |
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