Where Biology Meets Physics--A Converging View on Membrane Microdomain Dynamics
- PMID: 26781829
- DOI: 10.1016/bs.ctm.2015.10.004
Where Biology Meets Physics--A Converging View on Membrane Microdomain Dynamics
Abstract
For several decades, the phenomenon of membrane component segregation into microdomains has been a well-known and highly debated subject, and varying concepts including the raft hypothesis, the fence-and-picket model, hydrophobic-mismatch, and specific protein-protein interactions have been offered as explanations. Here, we review the level of insight into the molecular architecture of membrane domains one is capable of obtaining through biological experimentation. Using SNARE proteins as a paradigm, comprehensive data suggest that several dozens of molecules crowd together into almost circular spots smaller than 100 nm. Such clusters are highly dynamical as they constantly capture and lose molecules. The organization has a strong influence on the functional availability of proteins and likely provides a molecular scaffold for more complex protein networks. Despite this high level of insight, fundamental open questions remain, applying not only to SNARE protein domains but more generally to all types of membrane domains. In this context, we explain the view of physical models and how they are beneficial in advancing our concept of micropatterning. While biological models generally remain qualitative and descriptive, physics aims towards making them quantitative and providing reproducible numbers, in order to discriminate between different mechanisms which have been proposed to account for experimental observations. Despite the fundamental differences in biological and physical approaches as far as cell membrane microdomains are concerned, we are able to show that convergence on common points of views is in reach.
Keywords: Cluster phases; Equilibrium model; Fence-and-picket model; Membrane proteins; Membrane rafts; Microdomains; Out-of-equilibrium model; Syntaxin.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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