4.8 Article

Calcium-triggered fusion of lipid membranes is enabled by amphiphilic nanoparticles

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1902597117

Keywords

membrane fusion; nanoparticles; proteins; drug delivery

Funding

  1. US Department of Energy through the Computational Science Graduate Fellowship [DE-FG02-97ER25308]
  2. National Science Foundation [TG-DMR130042]
  3. US Army Research Laboratory
  4. US Army Research Office through the Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies [W911NF-13-D-0001]
  5. Swiss National Science Foundation
  6. NCCR Molecular Systems Engineering
  7. Ramon y Cajal Program [RYC2018-025575-I]
  8. Retos Investigacion Program from the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation, and Universities [RTI2018-101953-A-I00]

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Lipid membrane fusion is an essential process for a number of critical biological functions. The overall process is thermodynamically favorable but faces multiple kinetic barriers along the way. Inspired by nature's engineered proteins such as SNAP receptor [soluble N-ethylmale-imide-sensitive factor-attachment protein receptor (SNARE)] complexes or viral fusogenic proteins that actively promote the development of membrane proximity, nucleation of a stalk, and triggered expansion of the fusion pore, here we introduce a synthetic fusogen that can modulate membrane fusion and equivalently prime lipid membranes for calcium-triggered fusion. Our fusogen consists of a gold nanoparticle functionalized with an amphiphilic monolayer of alkanethiol ligands that had previously been shown to fuse with lipid bilayers. While previous efforts to develop synthetic fusogens have only replicated the initial steps of the fusion cascade, we use molecular simulations and complementary experimental techniques to demonstrate that these nanoparticles can induce the formation of a lipid stalk and also drive its expansion into a fusion pore upon the addition of excess calcium. These results have important implications in general understanding of stimuli-triggered fusion and the development of synthetic fusogens for biomedical applications.

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