Start Publications Self-assembly formation of multiple DNA-tethered lipid bilayers
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Self-assembly formation of multiple DNA-tethered lipid bilayers

Year: 2009

Journal: Journal of Structural Biology, Volume 168, Issue 1, October 2009, Pages 200-206, 20100827

Authors: Tabaei S.R. 1, Jönsson P. 1, Brändén M. 1, Höök F. 1

Last authors: Fredrik Höök

Organizations: 1 Div. of Biological Physics, Dept. of Applied Physics, Chalmers University of Technology, SE-41296 Gothenburg, Sweden

Country: Sweden

Inspired by natural cell–cell junctions, where membrane-residing proteins control the separation between two or more membranes without interfering with their integrity, we report a new self-assembly route for formation of multiple highly fluid tethered lipid bilayers with the inter-membrane volume geometrically confined by membrane-anchored DNA duplexes. The formation of multiple planar membrane–membrane junctions were accomplished using disk shaped bicelles, composed of a mixture of the long-chained dimyristoyl phosphatidylcholine (DMPC) and the short-chained dihexanoyl PC further stabilized with the positively charged detergent hexadecyl-trimethyl-ammonium bromide (CTAB). Quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation (QCM -D) monitoring and fluorescence microscopy and fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) were used to monitor the formation and to characterize the integrity of the self-assembled lipid–DNA architecture.