非生物脂质代谢使人造细胞的膜具有可塑性

IF 19.2 1区 化学 Q1 CHEMISTRY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Alessandro Fracassi, Andrés Seoane, Roberto J. Brea, Hong-Guen Lee, Alexander Harjung, Neal K. Devaraj
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引用次数: 0

摘要

活细胞膜的可塑性依赖于细胞能量驱动的复杂代谢网络。这些代谢过程直接控制细胞膜性质,如脂质组成和形态可塑性,这是细胞功能所必需的。尽管人工系统模仿天然膜的发展取得了显著进展,但能够维持代谢循环的合成膜的实现仍然是一个挑战。在这里,我们提出了一个产生和维持动态人工细胞膜的非生物磷脂代谢网络。化学偶联剂驱动瞬时稳定的非规范磷脂的原位合成,导致磷脂膜的形成和维持。我们发现磷脂代谢循环可以驱动脂质的自我选择,有利于特定脂质的富集。此外,我们证明控制脂质代谢可以诱导可逆的膜相变,促进不同种群的人工膜之间的脂质混合。我们的工作表明,一个简单的脂质代谢网络可以驱动人工膜的动态行为,为工程功能合成室的机制提供了见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Abiotic lipid metabolism enables membrane plasticity in artificial cells

Abiotic lipid metabolism enables membrane plasticity in artificial cells

The plasticity of living cell membranes relies on complex metabolic networks fueled by cellular energy. These metabolic processes exert direct control over membrane properties such as lipid composition and morphological plasticity, which are essential for cellular functions. Despite notable progress in the development of artificial systems mimicking natural membranes, the realization of synthetic membranes capable of sustaining metabolic cycles remains a challenge. Here we present an abiotic phospholipid metabolic network that generates and maintains dynamic artificial cell membranes. Chemical coupling agents drive the in situ synthesis of transiently stable non-canonical phospholipids, leading to the formation and maintenance of phospholipid membranes. We find that phospholipid metabolic cycles can drive lipid self-selection, favouring the enrichment of specific lipid species. Moreover, we demonstrate that controlling lipid metabolism can induce reversible membrane phase transitions, facilitating lipid mixing between distinct populations of artificial membranes. Our work demonstrates that a simple lipid metabolic network can drive dynamic behaviour in artificial membranes, offering insights into mechanisms for engineering functional synthetic compartments.

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来源期刊
Nature chemistry
Nature chemistry 化学-化学综合
CiteScore
29.60
自引率
1.40%
发文量
226
审稿时长
1.7 months
期刊介绍: Nature Chemistry is a monthly journal that publishes groundbreaking and significant research in all areas of chemistry. It covers traditional subjects such as analytical, inorganic, organic, and physical chemistry, as well as a wide range of other topics including catalysis, computational and theoretical chemistry, and environmental chemistry. The journal also features interdisciplinary research at the interface of chemistry with biology, materials science, nanotechnology, and physics. Manuscripts detailing such multidisciplinary work are encouraged, as long as the central theme pertains to chemistry. Aside from primary research, Nature Chemistry publishes review articles, news and views, research highlights from other journals, commentaries, book reviews, correspondence, and analysis of the broader chemical landscape. It also addresses crucial issues related to education, funding, policy, intellectual property, and the societal impact of chemistry. Nature Chemistry is dedicated to ensuring the highest standards of original research through a fair and rigorous review process. It offers authors maximum visibility for their papers, access to a broad readership, exceptional copy editing and production standards, rapid publication, and independence from academic societies and other vested interests. Overall, Nature Chemistry aims to be the authoritative voice of the global chemical community.
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