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Hydrostatic pressures developed by osmotically swelling vesicles bound to planar membranes

When phospholipid vesicles bound to a planar membrane are osmotically swollen, they develop a hydrostatic pressure (delta P) and fuse with the membrane. We have calculated the steady-state delta P, from the equations of irreversible thermodynamics governing water and solute flows, for two general me...

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Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1989
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2216208/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2467961
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collection PubMed
description When phospholipid vesicles bound to a planar membrane are osmotically swollen, they develop a hydrostatic pressure (delta P) and fuse with the membrane. We have calculated the steady-state delta P, from the equations of irreversible thermodynamics governing water and solute flows, for two general methods of osmotic swelling. In the first method, vesicles are swollen by adding a solute to the vesicle- containing compartment to make it hyperosmotic. delta P is determined by the vesicle membrane's permeabilities to solute and water. If the vesicle membrane is devoid of open channels, then delta P is zero. When the vesicle membrane contains open channels, then delta P peaks at a channel density unique to the solute permeability properties of both the channel and the membrane. The solute enters the vesicle through the channels but leaks out through the region of vesicle-planar membrane contact. delta P is largest for channels having high permeabilities to the solute and for solutes with low membrane permeabilities in the contact region. The model predicts the following order of solutes producing pressures of decreasing magnitude: KCl greater than urea greater than formamide greater than or equal to ethylene glycol. Differences between osmoticants quantitatively depend on the solute permeability of the channel and the density of channels in the vesicle membrane. The order of effectiveness is the same as that experimentally observed for solutes promoting fusion. Therefore, delta P drives fusion. When channels with small permeabilities are used, coupling between solute and water flows within the channel has a significant effect on delta P. In the second method, an impermeant solute bathing the vesicles is isosmotically replaced by a solute which permeates the channels in the vesicle membrane. delta P resulting from this method is much less sensitive to the permeabilities of the channel and membrane to the solute. delta P approaches the theoretical limit set by the concentration of the impermeant solute.
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spelling pubmed-22162082008-04-23 Hydrostatic pressures developed by osmotically swelling vesicles bound to planar membranes J Gen Physiol Articles When phospholipid vesicles bound to a planar membrane are osmotically swollen, they develop a hydrostatic pressure (delta P) and fuse with the membrane. We have calculated the steady-state delta P, from the equations of irreversible thermodynamics governing water and solute flows, for two general methods of osmotic swelling. In the first method, vesicles are swollen by adding a solute to the vesicle- containing compartment to make it hyperosmotic. delta P is determined by the vesicle membrane's permeabilities to solute and water. If the vesicle membrane is devoid of open channels, then delta P is zero. When the vesicle membrane contains open channels, then delta P peaks at a channel density unique to the solute permeability properties of both the channel and the membrane. The solute enters the vesicle through the channels but leaks out through the region of vesicle-planar membrane contact. delta P is largest for channels having high permeabilities to the solute and for solutes with low membrane permeabilities in the contact region. The model predicts the following order of solutes producing pressures of decreasing magnitude: KCl greater than urea greater than formamide greater than or equal to ethylene glycol. Differences between osmoticants quantitatively depend on the solute permeability of the channel and the density of channels in the vesicle membrane. The order of effectiveness is the same as that experimentally observed for solutes promoting fusion. Therefore, delta P drives fusion. When channels with small permeabilities are used, coupling between solute and water flows within the channel has a significant effect on delta P. In the second method, an impermeant solute bathing the vesicles is isosmotically replaced by a solute which permeates the channels in the vesicle membrane. delta P resulting from this method is much less sensitive to the permeabilities of the channel and membrane to the solute. delta P approaches the theoretical limit set by the concentration of the impermeant solute. The Rockefeller University Press 1989-02-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2216208/ /pubmed/2467961 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Articles
Hydrostatic pressures developed by osmotically swelling vesicles bound to planar membranes
title Hydrostatic pressures developed by osmotically swelling vesicles bound to planar membranes
title_full Hydrostatic pressures developed by osmotically swelling vesicles bound to planar membranes
title_fullStr Hydrostatic pressures developed by osmotically swelling vesicles bound to planar membranes
title_full_unstemmed Hydrostatic pressures developed by osmotically swelling vesicles bound to planar membranes
title_short Hydrostatic pressures developed by osmotically swelling vesicles bound to planar membranes
title_sort hydrostatic pressures developed by osmotically swelling vesicles bound to planar membranes
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2216208/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2467961