Shape transformation of vesicles induced by orientational arrangement of membrane proteins

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Abstract

Vesicles of lipid bilayer can adopt a variety of shapes due to different coating proteins. The ability of proteins to reshape membrane is typically characterized by inducing spontaneous curvature of the membrane at the coated area. BAR family proteins are known to have a crescent shape and can induce membrane curvature along its concaved body axis but not in the perpendicular direction. We model this type of proteins as a rod-shaped molecule with an orientation and induce normal curvature along its orientation in the tangential plane of the membrane surface. We show how a ring of these proteins reshape an axisymmetric vesicle when the protein curvature or orientation is varied. A discontinuous shape transformation from a protrusion shape without a neck to a one with a neck is found. Increasing the rigidity of the protein ring is able to smooth out the transition. Furthermore, we show that varying the protein orientation is able to induce an hourglass-shaped neck, which is significantly narrower than the reciprocal of the protein curvature. Our results offer a new angle to rationalize the helical structure formed by many proteins that carry out membrane fission functions.

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