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S. Das

Bio: S. Das is an academic researcher from Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur. The author has contributed to research in topics: Curvature & Vesicle. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 35 publications receiving 1142 citations. Previous affiliations of S. Das include University of Leicester & Cornell University.

Papers
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TL;DR: The present review first provides an overview of important classes of membrane proteins for which function is coupled to membrane curvature, and surveys several mechanisms that are assumed to underlie membranes curvature sensing and generation.
Abstract: Research investigating lipid membrane curvature generation and sensing is a rapidly developing frontier in membrane physical chemistry and biophysics. The fast recent progress is based on the discovery of a plethora of proteins involved in coupling membrane shape to cellular membrane function, the design of new quantitative experimental techniques to study aspects of membrane curvature, and the development of analytical theories and simulation techniques that allow a mechanistic interpretation of quantitative measurements. The present review first provides an overview of important classes of membrane proteins for which function is coupled to membrane curvature. We then survey several mechanisms that are assumed to underlie membrane curvature sensing and generation. Finally, we discuss relatively simple thermodynamic/mechanical models that allow quantitative interpretation of experimental observations.

344 citations

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TL;DR: The observations of experimental vesicle geometries being modulated by Gaussian curvature moduli differences confirm the prediction by the theory of Juelicher and Lipowsky that this geometry of giant unilamellar vesicles with coexisting liquid-disordered and liquid-ordered phases is dominated by the Gauss modulus.

302 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, small perturbations of three linear Delay Differential Equations (DDEs) close to Hopf bifurcation points are studied, and it is shown that the method of multiple scales, on simply discarding the infinitely many exponentially decaying components of the complementary solutions obtained at each stage of the approximation, can bypass the explicit center manifold calculation.
Abstract: We study small perturbations of three linear Delay Differential Equations (DDEs) close to Hopf bifurcation points. In analytical treatments of such equations, many authors recommend a center manifold reduction as a first step. We demonstrate that the method of multiple scales, on simply discarding the infinitely many exponentially decaying components of the complementary solutions obtained at each stage of the approximation, can bypass the explicit center manifold calculation. Analytical approximations obtained for the DDEs studied closely match numerical solutions.

123 citations

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TL;DR: The spontaneous curvature induced by endophilin is determined and a nonlinear curvature/composition coupling model is developed that predicts a curvature-induced phase transition among two states with varying protein density and membrane curvature.

117 citations

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TL;DR: This work investigates the adhesion of vesicles, under the influence of a contact potential, to substrates with various geometry and constructs an approximate analytical solution that predicts the shape of the vesicle for large internal excess pressure and contact potential.
Abstract: We investigate the adhesion of vesicles, under the influence of a contact potential, to substrates with various geometry For axisymmetric configurations, we find that the transition from a free vesicle to a bound state depends significantly on the substrate shape In general, the critical values of the contact potential at which these transitions take place are lower for a concave-shaped substrate than that for a flat-shaped substrate investigated in earlier studies We observe that the transitions happen at higher critical values of the contact potential when the substrate is convex and illustrate how these critical values depend on the curvature of the substrate In addition, we construct an approximate analytical solution that predicts the shape of the vesicle for large internal excess pressure and contact potential The analytical solution leads to an inequality that relates the surface tension with the contact potential

54 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Understanding of the mechanisms by which dynamin acts, its essential roles in cell physiology and the specific function of different dynamin isoforms are improved, highlighting specific contributions of this GTPase to the physiology of different tissues.
Abstract: Dynamin, the founding member of a family of dynamin-like proteins (DLPs) implicated in membrane remodelling, has a critical role in endocytic membrane fission events. The use of complementary approaches, including live-cell imaging, cell-free studies, X-ray crystallography and genetic studies in mice, has greatly advanced our understanding of the mechanisms by which dynamin acts, its essential roles in cell physiology and the specific function of different dynamin isoforms. In addition, several connections between dynamin and human disease have also emerged, highlighting specific contributions of this GTPase to the physiology of different tissues.

829 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that giant plasma membrane vesicles (GPMVs) or blebs formed from the plasma membranes of cultured mammalian cells can also segregate into micrometer-scale fluid phase domains, and GPMVs now provide an effective approach to characterize biological membrane heterogeneities.
Abstract: The membrane raft hypothesis postulates the existence of lipid bilayer membrane heterogeneities, or domains, supposed to be important for cellular function, including lateral sorting, signaling, and trafficking. Characterization of membrane lipid heterogeneities in live cells has been challenging in part because inhomogeneity has not usually been definable by optical microscopy. Model membrane systems, including giant unilamellar vesicles, allow optical fluorescence discrimination of coexisting lipid phase types, but thus far have focused on coexisting optically resolvable fluid phases in simple lipid mixtures. Here we demonstrate that giant plasma membrane vesicles (GPMVs) or blebs formed from the plasma membranes of cultured mammalian cells can also segregate into micrometer-scale fluid phase domains. Phase segregation temperatures are widely spread, with the vast majority of GPMVs found to form optically resolvable domains only at temperatures below ≈25°C. At 37°C, these GPMV membranes are almost exclusively optically homogenous. At room temperature, we find diagnostic lipid phase fluorophore partitioning preferences in GPMVs analogous to the partitioning behavior now established in model membrane systems with liquid-ordered and liquid-disordered fluid phase coexistence. We image these GPMVs for direct visual characterization of protein partitioning between coexisting liquid-ordered-like and liquid-disordered-like membrane phases in the absence of detergent perturbation. For example, we find that the transmembrane IgE receptor FceRI preferentially segregates into liquid-disordered-like phases, and we report the partitioning of additional well known membrane associated proteins. Thus, GPMVs now provide an effective approach to characterize biological membrane heterogeneities.

780 citations

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TL;DR: In updated versions of the model more emphasis has been placed on the mosaic nature of the macrostructure of cellular membranes where many protein and lipid components are limited in their rotational and lateral motilities in the membrane plane, especially in their natural states.

546 citations

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TL;DR: A third general mechanism for bending fluid cellular membranes: protein–protein crowding is proposed, and it is found that even proteins unrelated to membrane curvature, such as green fluorescent protein (GFP), can bend membranes when sufficiently concentrated.
Abstract: Membrane deformation is necessary to generate endocytic vesicles, but the molecular mechanisms proposed to drive membrane bending are controversial. Stachowiak and Schmid et al. report that crowding of proteins at the membrane is sufficient to induce curvature in vitro.

476 citations

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TL;DR: The state of the art in the field of realistic membrane simulations is reviewed and the current limitations and challenges ahead are discussed.
Abstract: Cell membranes contain a large variety of lipid types and are crowded with proteins, endowing them with the plasticity needed to fulfill their key roles in cell functioning. The compositional complexity of cellular membranes gives rise to a heterogeneous lateral organization, which is still poorly understood. Computational models, in particular molecular dynamics simulations and related techniques, have provided important insight into the organizational principles of cell membranes over the past decades. Now, we are witnessing a transition from simulations of simpler membrane models to multicomponent systems, culminating in realistic models of an increasing variety of cell types and organelles. Here, we review the state of the art in the field of realistic membrane simulations and discuss the current limitations and challenges ahead.

427 citations