PubMed 22004745
Referenced in: none
Automatically associated channels: Kir2.3
Title: Lipid bilayer mechanics in a pipette with glass-bilayer adhesion.
Authors: Tristan Ursell, Ashutosh Agrawal, Rob Phillips
Journal, date & volume: Biophys. J., 2011 Oct 19 , 101, 1913-20
PubMed link: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22004745
Abstract
Electrophysiology is a central tool for measuring how different driving forces (e.g., ligand concentration, transmembrane voltage, or lateral tension) cause a channel protein to gate. Upon formation of the high resistance seal between a lipid bilayer and a glass pipette, the so-called "giga-seal", channel activity can be recorded electrically. In this article, we explore the implications of giga-seal formation on the mechanical state of a lipid bilayer patch. We use a mechanical model for the free energy of bilayer geometry in the presence of glass-bilayer adhesion to draw three potentially important conclusions. First, we use our adhesion model to derive an explicit relationship between applied pressure and patch shape that is consistent with the Laplace-Young Law, giving an alternative method of calculating patch tension under pressure. With knowledge of the adhesion constant, which we find to be in the range ∼0.4-4 mN/m, and the pipette size, one can precisely calculate the patch tension as a function of pressure, without the difficultly of obtaining an optical measurement of the bilayer radius of curvature. Second, we use data from previous electrophysiological experiments to show that over a wide range of lipids, the resting tension on a electrophysiological patch is highly variable and can be 10-100 times higher than estimates of the tension in a typical cell membrane. This suggests that electrophysiological experiments may be systematically altering channel-gating characteristics and querying the channels under conditions that are not the same as their physiological counterparts. Third, we show that reversible adhesion leads to a predictable change in the population response of gating channels in a bilayer patch.