Photoswitchable Endocytosis of Biomolecular Condensates in Giant Vesicles
ADVANCED SCIENCE(2024)
摘要
Interactions between membranes and biomolecular condensates can give rise to complex phenomena such as wetting transitions, mutual remodeling, and endocytosis. In this study, light-triggered manipulation of condensate engulfment is demonstrated using giant vesicles containing photoswitchable lipids. UV irradiation increases the membrane area, which can be stored in nanotubes. When in contact with a condensate droplet, the UV light triggers rapid condensate endocytosis, which can be reverted by blue light. The affinity of the protein-rich condensates to the membrane and the reversibility of the engulfment processes is quantified from confocal microscopy images. The degree of photo-induced engulfment, whether partial or complete, depends on the vesicle excess area and the relative sizes of vesicles and condensates. Theoretical estimates suggest that utilizing the light-induced excess area to increase the vesicle-condensate adhesion interface is energetically more favorable than the energy gain from folding the membrane into invaginations and tubes. The overall findings demonstrate that membrane-condensate interactions can be easily and quickly modulated via light, providing a versatile system for building platforms to control cellular events and design intelligent drug delivery systems for cell repair. This work demonstrates efficient, rapid and reversible light-guided modulation of membrane-condensate interactions. Using giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) doped with the photolipid azo-PC, membrane-condensate wetting transitions are induced and characterized, enabling swift endocytosis over multiple cycles. The findings elucidate interaction mechanisms, applicable to diverse systems, offering potential for synthetic cell development and photo-pharmacology in drug delivery systems. image
更多查看译文
关键词
endocytosis,giant vesicles,membrane morphology,photoswitchable lipids,protein-rich condensates,wetting
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要