Simulation of polyethylene glycol and calcium-mediated membrane fusion

Journal article
Polymers
Lipid membranes
Author

Martina Pannuzzo, Djurre H. De Jong, Antonio Raudino, and Siewert J. Marrink

Doi

Citation (APA 7)

Pannuzzo, M., De Jong, D. H., Raudino, A., & Marrink, S. J. (2014). Simulation of polyethylene glycol and calcium-mediated membrane fusion. The Journal of Chemical Physics, 140(12).

Abstract

We report on the mechanism of membrane fusion mediated by polyethylene glycol (PEG) and Ca2+ by means of a coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulation approach. Our data provide a detailed view on the role of cations and polymer in modulating the interaction between negatively charged apposed membranes. The PEG chains cause a reduction of the inter-lamellar distance and cause an increase in concentration of divalent cations. When thermally driven fluctuations bring the membranes at close contact, a switch from cis to trans Ca2+-lipid complexes stabilizes a focal contact acting as a nucleation site for further expansion of the adhesion region. Flipping of lipid tails induces subsequent stalk formation. Together, our results provide a molecular explanation for the synergistic effect of Ca2+ and PEG on membrane fusion.