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Science 12 February 1993:
Vol. 259. no. 5097, pp. 952 - 955
DOI: 10.1126/science.8438153

Articles

Science, Vol 259, Issue 5097, 952-955
Copyright © 1993 by American Association for the Advancement of Science


articles

Existence of a flat phase in red cell membrane skeletons

CF Schmidt, K Svoboda, N Lei, IB Petsche, LE Berman, CR Safinya, and GS Grest

Department of Cellular and Developmental Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138.

Biomolecular membranes display rich statistical mechanical behavior. They are classified as liquid in the absence of shear elasticity in the plane of the membrane and tethered (solid) when the neighboring molecules or subunits are connected and the membranes exhibit solid-like elastic behavior in the plane of the membrane. The spectrin skeleton of red blood cells was studied as a model tethered membrane. The static structure factor of the skeletons, measured by small-angle x-ray and light scattering, was fitted with a structure factor predicted with a model calculation. The model describes tethered membrane sheets with free edges in a flat phase, which is a locally rough but globally flat membrane configuration. The fit was good for large scattering vectors. The membrane roughness exponent, zeta, defined through h alpha L zeta, where h is the average amplitude of out-of-plane fluctuations and L is the linear membrane dimension, was determined to be 0.65 +/- 0.10. Computer simulations of model red blood cell skeletons also showed this flat phase. The value for the roughness exponent, which was determined from the scaling properties of membranes of different sizes, was consistent with that from the experiments.


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
Hierarchical Self-Assembly of F-Actin and Cationic Lipid Complexes: Stacked Three-Layer Tubule Networks.
G. C. L. Wong, J. X. Tang, A. Lin, Y. Li, P. A. Janmey, and C. R. Safinya (2000)
Science 288, 2035-2039
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