Biological & Soft Matter Seminar: Why Cholesterol should be found primarily in the cytoplasmic leaflet of the plasma membrane

Prof. Michael Schick, University of Washington

17 June 2015, 11:10 
Shenkar Physics Building, Room 105 
Biological & Soft Matter Seminar

Abstract:

In the mammalian plasma membrane, cholesterol can translocate rapidly between the exoplasmic and cytoplasmic leaves, so that its distribution between them should be given by the equality of its chemical potential in the leaves. Due to its favorable interaction with sphingomyelin, which is almost entirely in the outer leaf, one expects the great majority of cholesterol to be there also. Experimental results do not support this, implying that there is some mechanism which attracts cholesterol to the inner leaf. We hypothesize that it is drawn there to reduce the bending free energy of the membrane caused by the presence of phosphatidylethanolamine (PE). It does this in two ways: first by simply diluting the amount of PE in the inner leaf, and second by ordering the tails of the PE so as to reduce its spontaneous curvature. Incorporating this mechanism into a model free energy for the bilayer, we find that between 50 and 60\% of the total cholesterol should be in the inner leaf of human erythrocytes.

 

 

Seminar Organizer: Guy Yaacoby

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