posted on 2018-03-16, 00:00authored byShushan He, Lutz Maibaum
Understanding the
(de)mixing behavior of multicomponent lipid bilayers
is an important step toward unraveling the nature of spatial composition
heterogeneities in cellular membranes and their role in biological
function. We use coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations to
study the composition phase diagram of a quaternary mixture of phospholipids
and cholesterol. This mixture is known to exhibit both uniform and
coexisting phases. We compare and combine different statistical measures
of membrane structure to identify the onset of phase coexistence in
composition space. An important element in our approach is the dependence
of composition heterogeneities on the size of the system. While homogeneous
phases can be structured and display long correlation lengths, the
hallmark behavior of phase coexistence is the scaling of the apparent
correlation length with system size. Because the latter cannot be
easily varied in simulations, our method instead uses information
obtained from observation windows of different sizes to accurately
distinguish phase coexistence from structured homogeneous phases.
This approach is built on very general physical principles, and will
be beneficial to future studies of the phase behavior of multicomponent
lipid bilayers.