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Biomimetic Vesicles with Designer Phospholipids Can Sense Environmental Redox Cues.

Huseyin ErguvenLiming WangBryan GutierrezAndrew H BeavenAlexander J SodtEnver Cagri Izgu
Published in: JACS Au (2024)
Cell-like materials that sense environmental cues can serve as next-generation biosensors and help advance the understanding of intercellular communication. Currently, bottom-up engineering of protocell models from molecular building blocks remains a grand challenge chemists face. Herein, we describe giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) with biomimetic lipid membranes capable of sensing environmental redox cues. The GUVs employ activity-based sensing through designer phospholipids that are fluorescently activated in response to specific reductive (hydrogen sulfide) or oxidative (hydrogen peroxide) conditions. These synthetic phospholipids are derived from 1,2-dipalmitoyl- rac -glycero-3-phosphocholine and they possess a headgroup with heterocyclic aromatic motifs. Despite their structural deviation from the phosphocholine headgroup, the designer phospholipids (0.5-1.0 mol %) mixed with natural lipids can vesiculate, and the resulting GUVs (7-20 μm in diameter) remain intact over the course of redox sensing. All-atom molecular dynamics simulations gave insight into how these lipids are positioned within the hydrophobic core of the membrane bilayer and at the membrane-water interface. This work provides a purely chemical method to investigate potential redox signaling and opens up new design opportunities for soft materials that mimic protocells.
Keyphrases
  • fatty acid
  • hydrogen peroxide
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • human health
  • electron transfer
  • nitric oxide
  • life cycle
  • single cell
  • risk assessment
  • molecular docking
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • climate change