DocumentCode :
2930596
Title :
Measuring the bending rigidity of giant unilamellar liposomes with differential confocal microscopy
Author :
Chau-Hwang Lee ; Wan-Chen Lin ; Jyhpyng Wang
Author_Institution :
Inst. of Atomic & Molecular Sci., Acad. Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan
fYear :
2000
fDate :
7-12 May 2000
Firstpage :
592
Lastpage :
593
Abstract :
Summary form only given. Giant unilamellar liposomes (diameter>10 /spl mu/m) are not only important model systems for cell-membrane research but also useful in controlled drug-delivery by encapsulating therapeutic components and transporting them into cells. For the understanding and applications of giant liposomes, it is essential to study their mechanical properties under different physical or physiological conditions. A crucial property is the bending rigidity, which is closely related to the activities of liposomes and the gel-liquid phase transition of liposomes bilayer membrane. To measure the bending modulus, one must deform liposome membrane with well-characterized force. Because the measurement requires a small deformation force and sub-micrometer detection of the membrane displacement, it has been a technology challenge. To date, the most popular method to determine the bending rigidity of unilamellar liposomes is micropipette aspiration, in which the bending modulus /spl kappa/ is deduced from surface tension of the sucked projection. However, when working with lipid mixtures, the high curvature in the sucked area can change the lipid composition. In addition, the diameter of the sucked projection, which is necessary for the calculation of /spl kappa/ is difficult to determine accurately. We report an all-optical technique to measure /spl kappa/ of giant unilamellar liposomes directly.
Keywords :
bending; biological techniques; biomechanics; biomembrane transport; cellular biophysics; drug delivery systems; lipid bilayers; optical microscopy; shear modulus; 10 mum; activities; all-optical technique; bending modulus; bending rigidity; bilayer membrane; cell-membrane research; controlled drug-delivery; crucial property; deform liposome; deformation force; differential confocal microscopy; gel-liquid phase transition; giant liposomes; giant unilamellar liposomes; high curvature; lipid composition; lipid mixtures; liposome membrane; liposomes; mechanical properties; micropipette aspiration; model systems; physical conditions; physiological conditions; sub-micrometer detection; sucked area; sucked projection; surface tension; technology challenge; therapeutic components; Microscopy; Optical fiber communication;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Lasers and Electro-Optics, 2000. (CLEO 2000). Conference on
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA, USA
Print_ISBN :
1-55752-634-6
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CLEO.2000.907434
Filename :
907434
Link To Document :
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