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Synaptic vesicle clusters or pools are functionally important constituents of chemical synapses. In the so-called reserve and the active pools, neurotransmitter-loaded synaptic vesicles (SVs) are stored and conditioned for fusion with the synaptic membrane and subsequent neurotransmitter release during synaptic activity. Vesicle clusters can be considered as so-called membraneless compartments, which form by liquid-liquid phase separation. Synapsin as one of the most abundant synaptic proteins has been identified as a major driver of pool formation. It has been shown to induce liquid-liquid phase separation and form condensates on its own in solution, but also has been shown to integrate vesicles into condensates in vitro. In this process, the intrinsically disordered region of synapsin is believed to play a critical role. Here, we first investigate the solution structure of synapsin and SVs separately by small-angle x-ray scattering. In the limit of low momentum transfer q, the scattering curve for synapsin gives clear indication for supramolecular aggregation (condensation). We then study mixtures of SVs and synapsin-forming condensates, aiming at the morphology and intervesicle distances, i.e., the structure of the condensates in solution. To obtain the structure factor S(q) quantifying intervesicle correlation, we divide the scattering curve of condensates by that of pure SV suspensions. Analysis of S(q) in combination with numerical simulations of cluster aggregation indicates a noncompact fractal-like vesicular fluid with rather short intervesicle distances at the contact sites.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bpj.2024.11.004 | DOI Listing |
Biophys J
December 2024
Institut für Röntgenphysik, Göttingen, Germany. Electronic address:
Synaptic vesicle clusters or pools are functionally important constituents of chemical synapses. In the so-called reserve and the active pools, neurotransmitter-loaded synaptic vesicles (SVs) are stored and conditioned for fusion with the synaptic membrane and subsequent neurotransmitter release during synaptic activity. Vesicle clusters can be considered as so-called membraneless compartments, which form by liquid-liquid phase separation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Phys
January 2024
Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, USA.
Despite the wide existence of vesicles in living cells as well as their important applications like drug delivery, the underlying mechanism of vesicle fusion/fission remains under debate. Classical models cannot fully explain recent observations in experiments and simulations. Here, we develop a constrained self-consistent field theory that allows tracking the shape evolution and free energy as a function of center-of-mass separation distance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLangmuir
July 2021
Davidson School of Chemical Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907-2100, United States.
As inferred from visual observations and turbidity measurements, the average radius of the unilamellar vesicles formed in water from the cationic double-chain surfactant didodecyldimethylammonium bromide (DDAB) varies with the method of preparation, being ∼24 nm after sonication (SS method) and ∼74 nm after extrusion/ultrafiltration (SE method). The radii were larger when the vesicles were produced in 10 mM NaBr, ∼65 nm for the SS method and ∼280 nm for the SE method. The specific turbidity, or turbidity per unit path length divided by the surfactant weight fraction, , of these vesicular dispersions increased with decreasing until a constant value was reached at *, which depends on the preparation method and the dispersion medium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys
July 2012
Univ Grenoble 1/CNRS, LIPhy UMR 5588, Grenoble F-38041, France.
Interactions between two vesicles in an imposed linear shear flow are studied theoretically, in the limit of almost spherical vesicles, with a large intervesicle distance, in a strong flow, with a large inner to outer viscosity ratio. This allows to derive a system of ordinary equations describing the dynamics of the two vesicles. We provide an analytic expression for the interaction law.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiophys J
February 2009
Department of Chemical Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey, USA.
We use membrane-anchored DNA as model adhesion receptors between lipid vesicles. By studying the thermal stability of DNA duplex formation, which tethers the vesicles into superstructures, we show that the melting temperature of a 10-base DNA sequence is dependent on the lipid composition of the tethered vesicles. We propose a simple model that describes how the intermembrane interactions tilt the free energy landscape for DNA binding.
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