A lipid bound actin meshwork organizes liquid phase separation in model membranes

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Abstract

The eukaryotic cell membrane is connected to a dense actin rich cortex. We present FCS and STED experiments showing that dense membrane bound actin networks have severe influence on lipid phase separation. A minimal actin cortex was bound to a supported lipid bilayer via biotinylated lipid streptavidin complexes (pinning sites). In general, actin binding to ternary membranes prevented macroscopic liquid-ordered and liquid-disordered domain formation, even at low temperature. Instead, depending on the type of pinning lipid, an actin correlated multi-domain pattern was observed. FCS measurements revealed hindered diffusion of lipids in the presence of an actin network. To explain our experimental findings, a new simulation model is proposed, in which the membrane composition, the membrane curvature, and the actin pinning sites are all coupled. Our results reveal a mechanism how cells may prevent macroscopic demixing of their membrane components, while at the same time regulate the local membrane composition. © Honigmann et al.

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Honigmann, A., Sadeghi, S., Keller, J., Hell, S. W., Eggeling, C., & Vink, R. (2014). A lipid bound actin meshwork organizes liquid phase separation in model membranes. ELife, 2014(3). https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.01671

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