384 8.6 Rigid-Body and Semirigid-Body Biomechanics
Equating ΔR with the membrane thickness 2w therefore indicates that the bending free
energy cost of establishing this spherical bilayer for a membrane patch area A0 is
(8.135)
∆G
A w
A
= 16
0
2
πκ
In other words, there is no direct dependence on the vesicle radius. In practice this can be
a few hundred kBT for a lipid vesicle. However, Equation 8.132 implies that relatively large
changes to the packing density of phospholipid molecules have a small free energy cost (~kBT
or less). This is consistent with phospholipid bilayers being relatively fluid structures.
FEA can also be applied at macromolecular length scales, for example, to model the effects
of mesh network of cytoskeletal filaments under the cell membrane and how these respond
to external mechanical perturbations. This level of mesoscale modeling can also be applied
to the bending motions of heterogeneous semi-stiff filaments such as those found in cilia,
which enable certain cells such as sperm to swim and which can cause fluid flow around cells
in tissues.
Worked Case Example 8.3: Nucleation of Phase-Separating Liquid Droplets
a For the formation of biomolecular liquid droplets, if the free energy ΔG is made up pri
marily of two components of a bulk enthalpic component due to nearest neighbor
attractive interactions of phase-separating molecules and a surface tension compo
nent, which scales with the area of droplets to limit their growth, show that you can
model ΔG as –AN + BN2/3 where N is the number of phase-separated molecules inside a
spherical droplet.
What is the energy barrier and the critical number of biomolecules Nc in a droplet in
terms of A and B?
c A protein of ~20 nm effective globular diameter, which was implicated in
neurodegenerative disease, was observed to form liquid–liquid droplets in live mam
malian cells. In separate in vitro experiments, the exothermic change in chemical
potential energy upon phase separation was estimated to be 2 × 10–3 kBT per molecule,
whereas the surface energy per unit area related to surface tension was equivalent to
4.5 × 10–2 kBT per molecule. Predict the radius of droplets at the nucleation activation
barrier assuming tight-packing of proteins and the ratio of the number of droplets
with this radius \compared to droplets with a 25% larger radius.
d When measurements were performed in a living cell, the total number of these phase-
separating protein molecules was estimated to be ~7000 molecules per cell. Using
super-resolution PALM on 10 different cells, from ~5000 droplets detected, a total of
352 had a diameter in the range 140–160 nm while the number of droplets whose
diameter was in the range 180–190 nm was 55. Discuss these findings considering
your prediction from part (c).
Answers
a The total free energy change of the bulk enthalpic interaction will be propor
tional to the number of molecules present N, assuming just nearest neighbor
interactions, and will be negative for an attractive (i.e. exothermic) interaction, so
will be –AN where A is a positive constant. The free energy change associated with
surface tension is proportional to droplet area. Assuming droplet density remains
the same, its volume is proportional to N, so its radius is proportional to N1/3, hence
its surface area is proportional to N2/3. Since surface tension will oppose droplet
growth the associated surface tension free energy change is positive, hence +BN2/3
where be B is a positive constant. Therefore, the net free energy change is
-AN + BN2/3.
KEY BIOLOGICAL
APPLICATIONS:
RIGID–SEMIRIGID BODY
MODELING TOOLS
Cell pattern formation in devel
opmental biology; Mechanical
signal transduction analysis.