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Figure out ideal membranes for study: mix of phospholipids etc. #2
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Top of my head things to consider about the type of membrane :-
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More practical / technical things to consider :-
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The phospholipid membrane compositions of bacterial cells, cancer cell lines and biological samples from cancer patients https://doi.org/10.1039/D1SC03597E ![]() ![]() In general, the outer phospholipid membrane of bacterial cells contains mixtures of polar phospholipids such as PE and PG.54–56 Therefore, traditionally these bacterial phospholipid membranes have been modelled in synthetic systems using a mixture of PE : PG in a 3 : 1 ratio.55,57 However, as detailed in Table 3, this is not representative of many naturally derived bacterial membranes. For example, although Gram-negative E. coli has a bacterial phospholipid composition that is very similar to these conventional model systems (PE : PG : CL 75 : 20 : 5),57 this is not the case for Gram-positive methicillinsensitive S. aureus U-71 (PG : L-PG : CL 80 : 12 : 5).58 ![]() As exemplified in Table 3, the phospholipid composition of AMR bacteria differs significantly from those membranes studied from analogous non-resistant bacterial strains. For example, the clinical pair of daptomycin susceptible (S447) and daptomycin resistant (R446) strains of Enterococcus faecium66 have a phospholipid composition PG : L-PG : CL : DAG 34 : 14 : 29 : 13 and PG : L-PG : CL : DAG 15 : 16 : 47 : 23 respectively.66 This was interesting, as there are a number of unique bacterial lipids that are already associated with antimicrobial resistance including lipid A and teichoic acids.79 |
Really useful figures! Could you add references from where they came from @KamDB ? |
Elastic moduli of normal and cancer cell membranes revealed by molecular dynamics simulations Normal cell membranes have a highly asymmetric lipid composition.6 That is, the extracellular leaflet is mainly composed of phosphatitylcholine (PC) and sphingo lipids, and the intracellular leaflet is mostly composed of phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) and phosphatidylserine (PS) lipids. Is is known that the concentration of the negatively charged PS lipids is increased by 5–9 times in the outer leaflet when normal membranes are transformed to cancer membranes, and this is usually considered as a biological cue that is related to the apoptotic pathway.7,8 As a consequence, cancer membranes have a less negative membrane potential than those of normal membranes.9–11 Another alteration in cancer cells is a reduction in the cholesterol concentration in their membranes,12 which results in decreases of the order of lipid hydrocarbon chains and membrane thickness, and an increase in the surface area of lipids.13–17 ![]() ![]() As seen, the asymmetry of lipid distributions between two leaflets, which is a general feature of normal membranes, is taken into accountin the construction. Having designed the normal membranes, the cancer counterparts are obtained by symmetrizing the number of lipids between the two leaflets. This mimics the overexpression in PS/PE in the outer leaflets of cancer membranes. The population of cholesterol is kept the same between the two leaflets. Each model contains four lipid types: 1,2-dioleoylsn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (DOPC), sphingomyelin (SM) lipids, dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DOPE) and 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phospho-L-serine (DOPS) lipids. Following the work of Rivel et al., we add 33% cholesterol (CHL) to each membrane model. This concentration is about the typical sterol concentration in the mammalian plasma membrane.44 We also construct a model (M5) containing only 15% cholestrol, but where the numbers of lipids are the same as that of the M1 model. These two models M1 and M5 enable us to study the effect of the reduction in cholesterol concentration. Interesting note : Referring to this paper - https://doi.org/10.1016%2Fj.bpj.2017.10.017 - the author previously came out with a martini model - https://doi.org/10.1021/ja507832e - where they simulated a 'normal' human membrane using 60+ lipids |
Computational Design of Pore-Forming Peptides with Potent Antimicrobial and Anticancer Activities Interesting note for pH sensitivity of cancer cells: |
2012 Cahill: "Of the four main phospholipids in membranes, threephosphatidylethanolamine (PE), phosphatidylcholine (PC), and sphingomyelin (SM)—are neutral, and one, phosphatidylserine (PS), is negatively charged. In a living cell, PE and PS are mostly in the cytosolic layer of the plasma membrane; PC and SM are mostly in the outer layer [1]; and the electrostatic potential of the cytosol is 20 to 120 mV lower than that of the extracellular environment."
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