Collective membrane motions of high and low amplitude, studied by dynamic light scattering and micro-interferometry

Abstract
Undulations of lipid bilayers were experimentally studied for the two limiting cases of high and weak lateral tension using two well established model systems: freely suspended planar lipid bilayers, so-called black lipid membranes (BLM) for high-tension studies and large unilamellar vesicles (LUV) for measurements at weak tension. This variation in tension results in changes of undulation amplitudes from several hundred nm (LUV) down to 1 nm (BLM), thus requiring different physical methods for their detection. We have employed microinterferometric techniques (RICM) for studying the regime of weak tension and dynamic light scattering (DLS) for that of high tension. The dedicated DLS set-up allowed the measurements of undulations over a wide wave vector range of 250<q/cm-1-1. This enabled the observation of collective membrane modes in two regimes, the oscillating one at low q and the overdamped regime at high q. The transition between both regimes at the bifurcation point is rather abrupt and depends on the lateral tension of the bilayer, as is demonstrated by comparing the dispersion curves of pure lipid and of lipid–cholestrol BLMs over the same q-range. The DLS measurements allowed a critical test of a hydrodynamic theory of the dispersion behaviour of membrane collective modes under tension. The DLS measurements are compared with RICM results of undulatory excitations of giant vesicles weakly adhering to substrates in the 10-6–2.5×10-7 m wavelength regime and at low frequencies (0.1–25 Hz). Experimental evidence for the strong decrease in the relaxation rate by the hydrodynamic coupling of the membrane with the wall is established.

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