4.5 Article

Fats' Love-Hate Relationships: A Molecular Dynamics Simulation and Hands-On Experiment Outreach Activity to Introduce the Amphiphilic Nature and Biological Functions of Lipids to Young Students and the General Public

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL EDUCATION
Volume 97, Issue 5, Pages 1360-1367

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jchemed.9b00776

Keywords

General Public; Elementary/Middle School Science; Public Understanding/Outreach; Biochemistry; Hands-On Learning/Manipulatives; Lipids; Molecular Properties/Structure; Computer-Based Learning

Funding

  1. Marie Curie Actions under the EU FP7 Initial Training Network SNAL [608184]
  2. EPSRC [EP/J003859/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Lipids are fundamental components of biological organisms and have important applications in the pharmaceutical, food, and cosmetics industries. Thus, it is important that young students and the general public properly understand the basic properties of lipids and how these relate to their biological and industrial roles. Here, we use molecular dynamics computer simulations and a simple, safe, and inexpensive popular hands-on activity, to communicate to participants why and how lipid molecules play a fundamental role in all living organisms and in our bodies. The activity is called Fats' Love-Hate Relationships, to highlight how the different parts of amphiphilic lipids interact with water. This love-hate relationship is vital to the biological functions of lipids and drives the formation of lipid structures that can be visualized at molecular scale with the computer simulations. The participants were encouraged to investigate the interactions between milk lipids and soap surfactants, creating beautiful complex artwork that they could then take home. The hands-on activity was accompanied by a video of a molecular simulation that illustrates milk-soap interactions at a molecular scale and helps to explain how the amphiphilicity of lipids creates the beautiful artwork at a molecular level. The outreach activity has been performed in science festivals and in classrooms and has been well received by participants of all ages with multiple learner comprehension levels (primary and secondary school students and the general public). By combining molecular simulation, explanations of the amphiphilic structure of the lipids, and an engaging hands-on activity, we explained how lipids interact with water and surfactants and inspired discussions on the link between the structure of the lipids and their biological function, namely, their structural and protective roles as a key component of cell membranes.

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