Hydrodynamic accumulation of small molecules and ions into cell-sized liposomes against a concentration gradient

In investigations of the emergence of protocells at the origin of life, repeatable and continuous supply of molecules and ions into the closed lipid bilayer membrane (liposome) is one of the fundamental challenges. Demonstrating an abiotic process to accumulate substances into preformed liposomes ag...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inCommunications chemistry Vol. 3; no. 1; p. 32
Main Authors Sugiyama, Hironori, Osaki, Toshihisa, Takeuchi, Shoji, Toyota, Taro
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group UK 09.03.2020
Nature Publishing Group
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Summary:In investigations of the emergence of protocells at the origin of life, repeatable and continuous supply of molecules and ions into the closed lipid bilayer membrane (liposome) is one of the fundamental challenges. Demonstrating an abiotic process to accumulate substances into preformed liposomes against the concentration gradient can provide a clue. Here we show that, without proteins, cell-sized liposomes under hydrodynamic environment repeatedly permeate small molecules and ions, including an analogue of adenosine triphosphate, even against the concentration gradient. The mechanism underlying this accumulation of the molecules and ions is shown to involve their unique partitioning at the liposomal membrane under forced external flow in a constrained space. This abiotic mechanism to accumulate substances inside of the liposomal compartment without light could provide an energetically up-hill process for protocells as a critical step toward the contemporary cells. How small molecules could have accumulated within hypothetical protocells on the early Earth is an open question. Here automated microfluidic experiments provide evidence for abiotic accumulation of small molecules within cell-sized liposomes under hydrodynamic flow evoking a surface-mediated mechanism.
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ISSN:2399-3669
2399-3669
DOI:10.1038/s42004-020-0277-2