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Sarah L. Veatch

Researcher at University of Michigan

Publications -  114
Citations -  9616

Sarah L. Veatch is an academic researcher from University of Michigan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Membrane & Vesicle. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 93 publications receiving 8526 citations. Previous affiliations of Sarah L. Veatch include University of British Columbia & University of Washington.

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Separation of liquid phases in giant vesicles of ternary mixtures of phospholipids and cholesterol.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors use fluorescence microscopy to directly observe liquid phases in giant unilamellar vesicles and find a simple relationship between chain melting temperature and miscibility transition temperature that holds for both phosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin lipids.
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Seeing spots: Complex phase behavior in simple membranes

TL;DR: The rich phase behavior observed in binary and ternary systems is described, including miscibility behavior varies with lipid type, lipid ratio, lipid oxidation, and level of impurity.
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Organization in lipid membranes containing cholesterol.

TL;DR: Using fluorescence microscopy, spontaneous lateral separation in free-floating giant unilamellar vesicles is observed and correlations between miscibility in bilayers and in monolayers are established.
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Probing protein heterogeneity in the plasma membrane using PALM and pair correlation analysis

TL;DR: PC-PALM is an effective tool with broad applicability for analysis of protein heterogeneity and function, adaptable to other single-molecule strategies, and shows dramatic changes in glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored protein arrangement under varying perturbations.
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Miscibility phase diagrams of giant vesicles containing sphingomyelin.

TL;DR: Fluorescence microscopy is used to observe coexisting liquid domains in vesicles containing SM, an unsaturated phosphatidylcholine lipid (either DOPC or POPC), and cholesterol, and detail indirect evidence for a three-phase coexistence of one solid and two liquid phases.