Cellular membranes mediate vital cellular processes by being subject to curvature and transmembrane electrical potentials. Here we build upon the existing theory for flexoelectricity in liquid crystals to quantify the coupling between lipid bilayer curvature and membrane potentials. Using molecular dynamics simulations, we show that headgroup dipole moments, the lateral pressure profile across the bilayer, and spontaneous curvature all systematically change with increasing membrane potentials. In particular, there is a linear dependence between the bending moment (the product of bending rigidity and spontaneous curvature) and the applied membrane potentials. We show that biologically relevant membrane potentials can induce biologically rele...
To alter and adjust the shape of the plasma membrane, cells harness various mechanisms of curvature ...
Pure bending of a membrane bilayer is developed including different properties for each membrane hal...
Lipid bilayers are formed from the self-assembly of two layers of amphiphilic lipid molecules. They ...
AbstractThe theory and experiments on model and biomembrane flexoelectricity are reviewed. Biologica...
Lipid bilayers behave as 2D dielectric materials that undergo polarization and deformation in the pr...
AbstractMany cellular and intracellular processes critically depend on membrane shape, but the shape...
The electrostatic contribution to spontaneous membrane curvature is calculated within Poisson-Boltzm...
Local curvature is a key driving force for spatial organization of cellular membranes, via a phenome...
On mesoscopic scales lipid membranes are well described by continuum theories whose main ingredients...
We present a computational study of bending models for the curvature elasticity of lipid bilayer mem...
Biological membranes undergo noticeable thermal fluctuations at physiological temperatures. When two...
To dynamically reshape the membrane, cells rely on a variety of intracellular mechanisms, ranging fr...
To alter and adjust the shape of the plasma membrane, cells harness various mechanisms of curvature ...
We propose a mathematically rigorous method to measure the spontaneous curvature of a bilayer membra...
Biological membranes are quasi-two-dimensional bilayer structures consisting of a nonideal mixture o...
To alter and adjust the shape of the plasma membrane, cells harness various mechanisms of curvature ...
Pure bending of a membrane bilayer is developed including different properties for each membrane hal...
Lipid bilayers are formed from the self-assembly of two layers of amphiphilic lipid molecules. They ...
AbstractThe theory and experiments on model and biomembrane flexoelectricity are reviewed. Biologica...
Lipid bilayers behave as 2D dielectric materials that undergo polarization and deformation in the pr...
AbstractMany cellular and intracellular processes critically depend on membrane shape, but the shape...
The electrostatic contribution to spontaneous membrane curvature is calculated within Poisson-Boltzm...
Local curvature is a key driving force for spatial organization of cellular membranes, via a phenome...
On mesoscopic scales lipid membranes are well described by continuum theories whose main ingredients...
We present a computational study of bending models for the curvature elasticity of lipid bilayer mem...
Biological membranes undergo noticeable thermal fluctuations at physiological temperatures. When two...
To dynamically reshape the membrane, cells rely on a variety of intracellular mechanisms, ranging fr...
To alter and adjust the shape of the plasma membrane, cells harness various mechanisms of curvature ...
We propose a mathematically rigorous method to measure the spontaneous curvature of a bilayer membra...
Biological membranes are quasi-two-dimensional bilayer structures consisting of a nonideal mixture o...
To alter and adjust the shape of the plasma membrane, cells harness various mechanisms of curvature ...
Pure bending of a membrane bilayer is developed including different properties for each membrane hal...
Lipid bilayers are formed from the self-assembly of two layers of amphiphilic lipid molecules. They ...