论文标题
多价配体受体结合中的亲和力和表面迁移率
Avidity and surface mobility in multivalent ligand-receptor binding
论文作者
论文摘要
有针对性的药物递送依赖于两个物理过程:在特定细胞膜上的治疗粒子与受体的选择性结合,然后将粒子跨膜转运。在本文中,我们通过将简单的实验系统与统计机械模型相结合来控制这两个过程的热力学和动力学的一些挑战。具体而言,我们表征并模拟胶体颗粒和流体脂质双层之间的多价配体 - 受体结合,以及膜结合颗粒的表面迁移率。我们表明,流体膜中受体的迁移率是结合热力学和动力学的关键。首先,我们发现粒子包膜结合能(或亲和力)是配体受体亲和力的强烈非线性函数。我们将非线性归因于多价和募集流体受体的结合,以结合位点。我们的结果还表明,通过膜对结合颗粒的部分包裹进一步增强了亲和力。其次,我们证明,膜结合的颗粒的横向迁移率也受受体募集的强烈影响。具体而言,我们发现膜结合粒子的横向扩散系数主要由膜内受体聚集体的流体动力阻力支配。这些结果为多价交互作用的工作理论框架提供了第一个直接验证之一。他们还强调,膜的流动性和弹性与配体受体亲和力同样重要,在确定附着在膜上的小颗粒的结合和运输中。
Targeted drug delivery relies on two physical processes: the selective binding of a therapeutic particle to receptors on a specific cell membrane, followed by transport of the particle across the membrane. In this article, we address some of the challenges in controlling the thermodynamics and dynamics of these two processes by combining a simple experimental system with a statistical mechanical model. Specifically, we characterize and model multivalent ligand-receptor binding between colloidal particles and fluid lipid bilayers, as well as the surface mobility of membrane-bound particles. We show that the mobility of the receptors within the fluid membrane is key to both the thermodynamics and dynamics of binding. First, we find that the particle-membrane binding free energy -- or avidity -- is a strongly nonlinear function of the ligand-receptor affinity. We attribute the nonlinearity to a combination of multivalency and recruitment of fluid receptors to the binding site. Our results also suggest that partial wrapping of the bound particles by the membrane enhances avidity further. Second, we demonstrate that the lateral mobility of membrane-bound particles is also strongly influenced by the recruitment of receptors. Specifically, we find that the lateral diffusion coefficient of a membrane-bound particle is dominated by the hydrodynamic drag against the aggregate of receptors within the membrane. These results provide one of the first direct validations of the working theoretical framework for multivalent interactions. They also highlight that the fluidity and elasticity of the membrane are as important as the ligand-receptor affinity in determining the binding and transport of small particles attached to membranes.