MRSEC Seminar

 

Coarse-Grained Simulation Studies of Mesoscopic Membrane Phenomena

 

Markus Deserno

Department of Physics
Carnegie Mellon University

 

deserno

 

Thursday, October 22, 2:00 p.m.

Tech L251

 

Lipid membranes exhibit a large spectrum of fascinating physical behavior, spanning many orders of magnitude both in length- and time scales. To cover this wide range, models of different resolution have been developed, from atomistically resolved lipid representations to triangulated fluid-elastic surfaces. In the intermediate regime of about 100 nanometer length scale and micro- to millisecond time scale mesoscopic coarse-grained models have recently covered much ground. They can approach phenomena in which cooperativity between several proteins are crucial, while still preserving the essence of many lipid degrees of freedom (area density, order, tilt, composition, etc.), whose coupling is deemed relevant in many biological situations, notably the "raft question". I will describe in more detail a particular solvent-free coarse-grained model recently developed by us and illustrate its applicability to a wide variety of phenomena, among them pore-formation by amphipathic peptides, protein aggregation on critically mixed bilayers, and membrane vesiculation driven by curvature-imprinting proteins.

Host: Professor Monica Olvera de la Cruz, MSE

 

   
   
 
 
The Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (MRSEC) is supported by the National Science Foundation under NSF Award Number DMR-0520513. Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect those of the National Science Foundation.
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