Giant Chromatic Lipid/Polydiacetylene Vesicles for Detection and Visualization of Membrane Interactions (original) (raw)
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Biochimica Et Biophysica Acta-biomembranes, 2008
The structural complexity of the cell membrane makes analysis of membrane processes in living cells, as compared to model membrane systems, highly challenging. Living cells decorated with surface-attached colorimetric/fluorescent polydiacetylene patches might constitute an effective platform for analysis and visualization of membrane processes in situ. This work examines the biological and chemical consequences of plasma membrane labeling of promyelocytic leukemia cells with polydiacetylene. We show that the extent of fusion between incubated lipid/diacetylene vesicles and the plasma membrane is closely dependent upon the lipid composition of both vesicles and cell membrane. In particular, we find that cholesterol presence increased bilayer fusion between the chromatic vesicles and the plasma membrane, suggesting that membrane organization plays a significant role in the fusion process. Spectroscopic data and physiological assays show that decorating the cell membrane with the lipid/diacetylene patches reduces the overall lateral diffusion within the membrane bilayer, however polydiacetylene labeling does not adversely affect important cellular metabolic pathways. Overall, the experimental data indicate that the viability and physiological integrity of the surface-engineered cells are retained, making possible utilization of the platform for studying membrane processes in living cells. We demonstrate the use of the polydiacetylene-labeled cells for visualizing and discriminating among different membrane interaction mechanisms of pharmaceutical compounds.
Biochimica et biophysica acta, 2009
We characterized the recently introduced environment-sensitive fluorescent membrane probe based on 3hydroxyflavone, F2N12S, in model lipid membranes displaying liquid disordered (Ld) phase, liquid ordered (Lo) phase, or their coexistence. Steady-state fluorescence studies in large unilamellar vesicles show that the probe dual emission drastically changes with the lipid bilayer phase, which can be correlated with the difference in their hydration. Using two-photon excitation microscopy on giant unilamellar vesicles, the F2N12S probe was found to bind both Ld and Lo phases, allowing visualization of the individual phases from the fluorescence intensity ratio of its two emission bands. By using a linearly polarized excitation light, a strong photoselection was observed for F2N12S in the Lo phase, indicating that its fluorophore is nearly parallel to the lipid chains of the bilayer. In contrast, the absence of the photoselection with the Ld phase indicated no predominant orientation of the probe in the Ld phase. Comparison of the present results with those reported previously for F2N12S in living cells suggests a high content of the Lo phase in the outer leaflet of the cell plasma membranes. Taking into account the high selectivity of F2N12S for the cell plasma membranes and its suitability for both single-and two-photon excitation, applications of this probe to study membrane lateral heterogeneity in biological membranes are foreseen.
The Journal of General Physiology, 1987
A B S T R A C T Video fluorescence microscopy was used to study adsorption and fusion of unilamellar phospholipid vesicles to solvent-free planar bilayer membranes. Large unilamellar vesicles (2-10 ~m diam) were loaded with 200 mM of the membrane-impermeant fluorescent dye calcein. Vesicles were ejected from a pipette brought to within 10 #m of the planar membrane, thereby minimizing background fluorescence and diffusion times through the unstirred layer. Vesicle binding to the planar membrane reached a maximum at 20 mM calcium. The vesicles fused when they were osmotically swollen by dissipating a KCI gradient across the vesicular membrane with the channel-forming antibiotic nystatin or, alternatively, by making the c/s compartment hyperosmotic. Osmotically induced ruptures appeared as bright flashes of light that lasted several video fields (each 1/60 s). Flashes of light, and therefore swelling, occurred only when channels were present in the vesicular membrane. The flashes were observed when nystatin was added to the c/s compartment but not when added to the trans. This demonstrates that the vesicular and planar membranes remain individual bilayers in the region of contact, rather than melding into a single bilayer. Measurements of flash duration in the presence of cobalt (a quencher of caicein fluorescence) were used to determine the side of the planar membrane to which dye was released. In the presence of 20 mM calcium, 50% of the vesicle ruptures were found to result in fusion with the planar membrane. In 100 mM calcium, nearly 70% of the vesicle ruptures resulted in fusion. The methods of this study can be used to increase significantly the efficiency of reconstitution of channels into planar membranes by fusion techniques.
2000
A B S T R A C T Video fluorescence microscopy was used to study adsorption and fusion of unilamellar phospholipid vesicles to solvent-free planar bilayer membranes. Large unilamellar vesicles (2-10 ~m diam) were loaded with 200 mM of the membrane-impermeant fluorescent dye calcein. Vesicles were ejected from a pipette brought to within 10 #m of the planar membrane, thereby minimizing background fluorescence and diffusion times through the unstirred layer. Vesicle binding to the planar membrane reached a maximum at 20 mM calcium. The vesicles fused when they were osmotically swollen by dissipating a KCI gradient across the vesicular membrane with the channel-forming antibiotic nystatin or, alternatively, by making the c/s compartment hyperosmotic. Osmotically induced ruptures appeared as bright flashes of light that lasted several video fields (each 1/60 s). Flashes of light, and therefore swelling, occurred only when channels were present in the vesicular membrane. The flashes were observed when nystatin was added to the c/s compartment but not when added to the trans. This demonstrates that the vesicular and planar membranes remain individual bilayers in the region of contact, rather than melding into a single bilayer. Measurements of flash duration in the presence of cobalt (a quencher of caicein fluorescence) were used to determine the side of the planar membrane to which dye was released. In the presence of 20 mM calcium, 50% of the vesicle ruptures were found to result in fusion with the planar membrane. In 100 mM calcium, nearly 70% of the vesicle ruptures resulted in fusion. The methods of this study can be used to increase significantly the efficiency of reconstitution of channels into planar membranes by fusion techniques.
Growth and division experiments on phospholipid boundaries were carried out using glass microsphere-supported phospholipids (DOPC) giant vesicles (GVs) fed with a fatty acid solution (oleic acid) at two distinct feeding rates. Both fast and slow feeding methods produced daughter GVs. Under slow feeding conditions the membrane growth process (evagination, buds, filaments) was observed in detail by fluorescence microscopy. The density difference between supported mother vesicles and newly formed daughter vesicles allowed for their easy separation. Mass spectrometric analysis of the resulting mother and daughter GVs showed that the composition of both vesicle types was a mixture of original supported phospholipids and added fatty acids reflecting the total composition of amphiphiles after the feeding process. Thus, self-reproduction of phospholipid vesicles can take place under preservation of the lipid composition but different aggregate size.
Biophysical Journal, 2007
In recent years, giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) have become objects of intense scrutiny by chemists, biologists, and physicists who are interested in the many aspects of biological membranes. In particular, this ''cell size'' model system allows direct visualization of particular membrane-related phenomena at the level of single vesicles using fluorescence microscopyrelated techniques. However, this model system lacks two relevant features with respect to biological membranes: 1), the conventional preparation of GUVs currently requires very low salt concentration, thus precluding experimentation under physiological conditions, and 2), the model system lacks membrane compositional asymmetry. Here we show for first time that GUVs can be prepared using a new protocol based on the electroformation method either from native membranes or organic lipid mixtures at physiological ionic strength. Additionally, for the GUVs composed of native membranes, we show that membrane proteins and glycosphingolipids preserve their natural orientation after electroformation. We anticipate our result to be important to revisit a vast variety of findings performed with GUVs under low-or no-salt conditions. These studies, which include results on artificial cell assembly, membrane mechanical properties, lipid domain formation, partition of membrane proteins into lipid domains, DNA-lipid interactions, and activity of interfacial enzymes, are likely to be affected by the amount of salt present in the solution.
Forming giant vesicles with controlled membrane composition, asymmetry, and contents
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2011
Growing knowledge of the key molecular components involved in biological processes such as endocytosis, exocytosis, and motility has enabled direct testing of proposed mechanistic models by reconstitution. However, current techniques for building increasingly complex cellular structures and functions from purified components are limited in their ability to create conditions that emulate the physical and biochemical constraints of real cells. Here we present an integrated method for forming giant unilamellar vesicles with simultaneous control over (i) lipid composition and asymmetry, (ii) oriented membrane protein incorporation, and (iii) internal contents. As an application of this method, we constructed a synthetic system in which membrane proteins were delivered to the outside of giant vesicles, mimicking aspects of exocytosis. Using confocal fluorescence microscopy, we visualized small encapsulated vesicles docking and mixing membrane components with the giant vesicle membrane, resulting in exposure of previously encapsulated membrane proteins to the external environment. This method for creating giant vesicles can be used to test models of biological processes that depend on confined volume and complex membrane composition, and it may be useful in constructing functional systems for therapeutic and biomaterials applications.
Measuring the Lamellarity of Giant Lipid Vesicles with Differential Interference Contrast Microscopy
Biophysical Journal, 2013
Giant unilamellar vesicles are a widely utilized model membrane system, providing free-standing bilayers unaffected by support-induced artifacts. To measure the lamellarity of such vesicles, fluorescence microscopy is one commonly utilized technique, but it has the inherent disadvantages of requiring lipid staining, thereby affecting the intrinsic physical and chemical properties of the vesicles, and it requires a calibration by statistical analysis of a vesicle ensemble. Herein we present what we believe to be a novel label-free optical method to determine the lamellarity of giant vesicles based on quantitative differential interference contrast (qDIC) microscopy. The method is validated by comparison with fluorescence microscopy on a statistically significant number of vesicles, showing correlated quantization of the lamellarity. Importantly, qDIC requires neither sample-dependent calibration nor sample staining, and thus can measure the lamellarity of any giant vesicle without additional preparation or interference with subsequent investigations. Furthermore, qDIC requires only a microscope equipped with differential interference contrast and a digital camera.