December 13, 2018

This article has been reviewed according to Science X's editorial process and policies. Editors have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

New transport mechanism of a nanomaterial through a cell membrane: membrane stretching

Nanotubes trapped inside the membrane. Credit: URV
× close
Nanotubes trapped inside the membrane. Credit: URV

Increasing awareness of bioeffects and toxicity of nanomaterials interacting with cells puts in focus the mechanisms by which nanomaterials can cross lipid membranes. Apart from well-discussed energy-dependent endocytosis for large objects and passive diffusion through membranes by solute molecules, there are other transport mechanisms based on physical principles. A team of theoretical physics at Universitat Rovira i Virgili in Tarragona, led by Dr. Vladimir Baulin, designed a research project to investigate the interaction between nanotubes and lipid membranes. In computer simulations, the researchers studied what they call a "model bilayer" composed of only one type of lipid. Based on their calculations, the team observed that an ultra -short nanotube (10nm length) can insert perpendicularly to the lipid bilayer core.

They observed that these nanotubes stay trapped in the cell membrane, as commonly accepted by the scientific community. But when they stretched their model cell membrane, nanotubes that were trapped in the bilayer suddenly started to escape from both sides. This means that it is possible to control the transport of a nanomaterial across a by tuning the membrane tension.

Dr. Baulin contacted Dr. Jean-Baptiste Fleury at the Saarland University (Germany) to confirm this mechanism and to study this tension-mediated transport phenomenon experimentally. Dr. Fleury and his team designed a microfluidic experiment with a well-controlled phospholipid bilayer, an experimental model for cell membranes, and added ultra-small carbon nanotubes (10nm in length) in solution. The nanotubes had an adsorbed lipid monolayer that guarantees their stable dispersion and prevent their clustering. Using a combination of optical fluorescent microscopy and electrophysiological measurements, the team could follow an individual nanotube crossing a bilayer and unravel their pathway on a molecular level. And as predicted by the simulations, they observed that nanotubes entered the bilayer by dissolving their lipid coating into the artificial membrane. When a tension of 4mN/m was applied to the bilayer, nanotubes spontaneously escaped the bilayer just in few milliseconds, while at lower tensions nanotubes remain trapped inside the membrane.

This discovery of translocation of tiny through barriers protecting cells, i.e. lipid bilayers, may raise concerns about safety of nanomaterials for , and suggest new mechanical mechanisms to control the drug delivery.

More information: Yachong Guo et al, Tension-Induced Translocation of an Ultrashort Carbon Nanotube through a Phospholipid Bilayer, ACS Nano (2018). DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.8b04657

Journal information: ACS Nano

Provided by Universitat Rovira i Virgili

Load comments (0)