English

Membrane-mediated interactions

Biological Physics 2019-03-15 v1 Soft Condensed Matter

Abstract

Interactions mediated by the cell membrane between inclusions, such as membrane proteins or antimicrobial peptides, play important roles in their biological activity. They also constitute a fascinating challenge for physicists, since they test the boundaries of our understanding of self-assembled lipid membranes, which are remarkable examples of two-dimensional complex fluids. Inclusions can couple to various degrees of freedom of the membrane, resulting in different types of interactions. In this chapter, we review the membrane-mediated interactions that arise from direct constraints imposed by inclusions on the shape of the membrane. These effects are generic and do not depend on specific chemical interactions. Hence, they can be studied using coarse-grained soft matter descriptions. We deal with long-range membrane-mediated interactions due to the constraints imposed by inclusions on membrane curvature and on its fluctuations. We also discuss the shorter-range interactions that arise from the constraints on membrane thickness imposed by inclusions presenting a hydrophobic mismatch with the membrane.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1903.05712,
  title  = {Membrane-mediated interactions},
  author = {Anne-Florence Bitbol and Doru Constantin and Jean-Baptiste Fournier},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1903.05712},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

38 pages, 10 figures, pre-submission version. In: Bassereau P., Sens P. (eds) Physics of Biological Membranes. Springer, Cham

R2 v1 2026-06-23T08:07:28.585Z