Many cellular lipid bilayers consist of leaflets that differ in their lipid composition — a non-equilibrium state actively maintained by cellular sorting processes that counter passive lipid flip-flop. While this lipidomic aspect of membrane asymmetry has been known for half a century, its elastic and thermodynamic ramifications have garnered attention only fairly recently. Notably, the torque arising when lipids of different spontaneous curvature reside in the two leaflets can be counterbalanced by a difference in lateral mechanical stress between them. Such membranes can be essentially flat in their relaxed state, despite being compositionally strongly asymmetric, but they harbor a surprisingly large but macroscopically invisible differential stress. This hidden stress can affect a wide range of other membrane properties, such as the resistance to bending, the nature of phase transitions in its leaflets, and the distribution of flippable species, most notably sterols. In this short note we offer a concise overview of our recently proposed basic framework for capturing the interplay between curvature, lateral stress, leaflet phase behavior, and cholesterol distribution in generally asymmetric membranes, and how its implied signatures might be used to learn more about the hidden but physically consequential differential stress. 
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                            Biomembranes balance many types of leaflet asymmetries
                        
                    
    
            Many biological membranes host different lipid species in their two leaflets. Since their spontaneous curvatures are typically not the same, this compositional asymmetry generally entails bending torques, which can be counteracted by differential stress—the difference between the two leaflet tensions. This stress, in turn, can affect elastic parameters or phase behavior of the membrane or each individual leaflet, or push easily flippable species, especially cholesterol, from the compressed leaflet into the tense leaflet. In short, breaking the symmetry of a single observable (to wit: composition), essentially breaks all other symmetries as well, with many potentially interesting consequences. This brief report examines the elastic aspects of this interplay, focusing on some elementary conditions of mechanical and thermodynamic equilibrium, but also shows how this poses novel questions that we are only beginning to appreciate. 
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                            - PAR ID:
- 10524461
- Editor(s):
- Gnanakaran, Sandrasegaram; Gorfe, Alemayehu
- Publisher / Repository:
- Elsevier
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Current Opinion in Structural Biology
- Volume:
- 87
- ISSN:
- 0959-440X
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 102832
- Subject(s) / Keyword(s):
- Membrane asymmetry Differential stress Curvature elasticity Cholesterol distribution Phase behavior
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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