posted on 2007-12-13, 00:00authored byPaul A. Beales, T. Kyle Vanderlick
We demonstrate a method of heterogeneous vesicle binding using membrane-anchored, single-stranded DNA
that can be used over several orders of magnitude in vesicle size, as demonstrated for large 100 nm vesicles
and giant vesicles several microns in diameter. The aggregation behavior is studied for a range of DNA
surface concentrations and solution ionic strengths. Three analogous states of aggregation are observed on
both vesicle size scales. We explain the existence of these three regimes by a combination of DNA binding
favorability, vesicle collision kinetics, and lateral diffusion of the DNA within the fluid membrane. The
reversibility of the DNA hybridization allows dissociation of the structures formed and can be achieved either
thermally or by a reduction in the ionic strength of the external aqueous environment. Difficulty is found in
fully unbinding giant vesicles by thermal dehybridization, possibly frustrated by the attractive van der Waals
minimum in the intermembrane potential when brought into close contact by DNA binding. This obstacle
can be overcome by the isothermal reduction of the ionic strength of the solution: this reduces the Debye
screening length, coupling the effects of DNA dehybridization and intermembrane repulsion due to the increased
electrostatic repulsion between the highly charged DNA backbones.