Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • actin (4)
  • cancer (3)
  • carbohydrates (1)
  • cellular (3)
  • density cell (1)
  • filament (1)
  • glycocalyx (3)
  • graft (1)
  • hyaluronan (1)
  • lipids (3)
  • metastasis (1)
  • mucin (3)
  • plasma membrane (4)
  • polymer (12)
  • regulates (1)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    The plasma membrane hosts a wide range of biomolecules, mainly proteins and carbohydrates, that mediate cellular interactions with its environment. The crowding of such biomolecules regulates cellular morphologies and cellular trafficking. Recent discoveries have shown that the structure and density of cell surface polymers and hence the signaling machinery change with the state of the cell, especially in cancer progression. The alterations in membrane-attached glycocalyx and glycosylation of proteins and lipids are common features of cancer cells. The overexpression of glycocalyx polymers, such as mucin and hyaluronan, strongly correlates with cancer metastasis. Here, we present a mesoscale biophysics-based model that accounts for the shape regulation of membranes by crowding of membrane-attached biopolymer-glycocalyx and actin networks. Our computational model is based on the dynamically triangulated Monte Carlo model for membranes and coarse-grained representations of polymer chains. The model allows us to investigate the crowding-induced shape transformations in cell membranes in a tension- and graft polymer density-dependent manner. Our results show that the number of membrane protrusions and their shape depend on membrane tension, with higher membrane tension inducing more tubular protrusions than the vesicular shapes formed at low tension at high surface coverage of polymers. The shape transformations occur above the threshold density predicted by the polymer brush theory, but this threshold also depends on the membrane tension. Increasing the size of the polymer, either by changing the length or by adding side chains, is shown to increase the crowding-induced curvature. The effect of crowding is more prominent for flexible polymers than for semiflexible rigid polymers. We also present an extension of the model that incorporates properties of the actin-like filament networks and demonstrate how tubular structures can be generated by biopolymer crowding on the cytosolic side of cell membranes. Copyright © 2022 Biophysical Society. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

    Citation

    Sreeja Kutti Kandy, Ravi Radhakrishnan. Crowding-induced membrane remodeling: Interplay of membrane tension, polymer density, architecture. Biophysical journal. 2022 Oct 04;121(19):3674-3683

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags

    Expand section icon Substances


    PMID: 35619564

    View Full Text