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Peridynamic Modeling of Ruptures in Biomembranes

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2016

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Public Library of Science
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Taylor, Michael, Irep Gözen, Samir Patel, Aldo Jesorka, and Katia Bertoldi. 2016. “Peridynamic Modeling of Ruptures in Biomembranes.” PLoS ONE 11 (11): e0165947. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0165947. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0165947.

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Abstract

We simulate the formation of spontaneous ruptures in supported phospholipid double bilayer membranes, using peridynamic modeling. Experiments performed on spreading double bilayers typically show two distinct kinds of ruptures, floral and fractal, which form spontaneously in the distal (upper) bilayer at late stages of double bilayer formation on high energy substrates. It is, however, currently unresolved which factors govern the occurrence of either rupture type. Variations in the distance between the two bilayers, and the occurrence of interconnections (“pinning sites”) are suspected of contributing to the process. Our new simulations indicate that the pinned regions which form, presumably due to Ca2+ ions serving as bridging agent between the distal and the proximal bilayer, act as nucleation sites for the ruptures. Moreover, assuming that the pinning sites cause a non-zero shear modulus, our simulations also show that they change the rupture mode from floral to fractal. At zero shear modulus the pores appear to be circular, subsequently evolving into floral pores. With increasing shear modulus the pore edges start to branch, favoring fractal morphologies. We conclude that the pinning sites may indirectly determine the rupture morphology by contributing to shear stress in the distal membrane.

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Physical Sciences, Mathematics, Geometry, Fractals, Biology and Life Sciences, Biochemistry, Lipids, Cell Biology, Cellular Structures and Organelles, Cell Membranes, Biochemical Simulations, Computational Biology, Physics, Classical Mechanics, Deformation, Damage Mechanics, Simulation and Modeling, Phospholipids, Lipid Bilayer

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