Issue 38, 2015

Direct in situ measurement of specific capacitance, monolayer tension, and bilayer tension in a droplet interface bilayer

Abstract

Thickness and tension are important physical parameters of model cell membranes. However, traditional methods to measure these quantities require multiple experiments using separate equipment. This work introduces a new multi-step procedure for directly accessing in situ multiple physical properties of droplet interface bilayers (DIB), including specific capacitance (related to thickness), lipid monolayer tension in the Plateau–Gibbs border, and bilayer tension. The procedure employs a combination of mechanical manipulation of bilayer area followed by electrowetting of the capacitive interface to examine the sensitivities of bilayer capacitance to area and contact angle to voltage, respectively. These data allow for determining the specific capacitance of the membrane and surface tension of the lipid monolayer, which are then used to compute bilayer thickness and tension, respectively. The use of DIBs affords accurate optical imaging of the connected droplets in addition to electrical measurements of bilayer capacitance, and it allows for reversibly varying bilayer area. After validating the accuracy of the technique with diphytanoyl phosphatidylcholine (DPhPC) DIBs in hexadecane, the method is applied herein to quantify separately the effects on membrane thickness and tension caused by varying the solvent in which the DIB is formed and introducing cholesterol into the bilayer. Because the technique relies only on capacitance measurements and optical images to determine both thickness and tension, this approach is specifically well-suited for studying the effects of peptides, biomolecules, natural and synthetic nanoparticles, and other species that accumulate within membranes without altering bilayer conductance.

Graphical abstract: Direct in situ measurement of specific capacitance, monolayer tension, and bilayer tension in a droplet interface bilayer

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
27 Apr 2015
Accepted
05 Aug 2015
First published
05 Aug 2015

Soft Matter, 2015,11, 7592-7605

Author version available

Direct in situ measurement of specific capacitance, monolayer tension, and bilayer tension in a droplet interface bilayer

G. J. Taylor, G. A. Venkatesan, C. P. Collier and S. A. Sarles, Soft Matter, 2015, 11, 7592 DOI: 10.1039/C5SM01005E

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