posted on 2020-07-07, 15:05authored byYutaka Kazoe, Kazuma Mawatari, Lixiao Li, Hisaki Emon, Naoya Miyawaki, Hiroyuki Chinen, Kyojiro Morikawa, Ayumi Yoshizaki, Petra S. Dittrich, Takehiko Kitamori
Water inside and between cells with
dimensions on the order of
101–103 nm such as synaptic clefts and
mitochondria is thought to be important to biological functions, such
as signal transmissions and energy production. However, the characterization
of water in such spaces has been difficult owing to the small size
and complexity of cellular environments. To this end, we proposed
and fabricated a biomimetic nanospace exploiting nanofluidic channels
with defined dimensions of hundreds of nanometers and controlled environments.
A method of modifying a glass nanochannel with a unilamellar lipid
bilayer was developed. We revealed that 2.1–5.6 times higher
viscosity of water arises in a 200 nm sized biomimetic nanospace by
interactions between water molecules and the lipid bilayer surface
and significantly affects the molecular/ion transport that is required
for the biological functions. The proposed method provides both a
technical breakthrough and new findings to the fields of physical
chemistry and biology.