posted on 2015-08-18, 00:00authored byMatthew
J. Peel, Stephen J. Cross, Oliver Birkholz, Amine Aladağ, Jacob Piehler, Suman Peel
Polymer-supported
bilayers (PSBs) are a recognized tool for drug
discovery through function-interaction analysis of membrane proteins.
While silica-supported bilayers (SSBs) spontaneously form from surface-adsorbed
vesicles, successful PSB formation via a similar method has thus far
been limited by an insufficient understanding of the underlying vesicle-remodelling
processes. Here, we generated a polymer support through the incubation
of poly-l-lysine conjugated to alkyl-chain-terminated poly(ethylene)glycol
on silica. This polymer-coated silica substrate yielded efficient
vesicle adsorption and spontaneous bilayer formation, thereby providing
a rare opportunity to address the mechanism of PSB formation and compare
it to that of SSB. The combined use of super-resolution imaging, kinetics,
and simulations indicates that the rupture of stochastically formed
vesicle clusters is the rate-limiting step, which is an order of magnitude
higher for silica than for polymer-coated silica. This was confirmed
by directly demonstrating increased rupture rates for surface adsorbed
multivesicle assemblies formed by vesicle cross-linking in solution.
On the basis of this key insight we surmised that a low propensity
of cluster rupture can be compensated for by an increase in the number
density of clusters: the deposition of a mixture of oppositely charged
vesicles resulted in bilayer formation on another alkane–PEG
type of interface, which despite efficient vesicle adsorption otherwise
fails to support spontaneous bilayer formation. This potentially provides
a universal strategy for promoting bilayer formation on resistant
surfaces without resorting to modifying the surface itself. Therefore,
multivesicle assemblies with tailored geometries not only could facilitate
bilayer formation on polymers with interesting functional properties
but also could instigate the exploration of vesicle architecture for
other processes involving vesicle remodelling such as drug delivery.