4.8 Article

Chiral lipid bilayers are enantioselectively permeable

Journal

NATURE CHEMISTRY
Volume 13, Issue 8, Pages 786-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41557-021-00708-z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Simons Foundation through the Simons Collaboration on the Origins of Life [SCOL 287625]
  2. National Institutes of Health [R01GM120491]
  3. National Science Foundation [1255250]
  4. Div Of Molecular and Cellular Bioscience
  5. Direct For Biological Sciences [1255250] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Homochiral membrane bilayers play a critical role in organizing biological functions, with membrane permeability correlating with a molecule's lipophilicity. Enantioselective permeation through chiral phospholipid bilayers provides new insights for drug design criteria and potential kinetic mechanisms for the abiotic emergence of homochirality.
Homochiral membrane bilayers organize biological functions in all domains of life. The membrane's permeability-its key property-correlates with a molecule's lipophilicity, but the role of the membrane's rich and uniform stereochemistry as a permeability determinant is largely ignored in empirical and computational measurements. Here, we describe a new approach to measuring permeation using continuously generated microfluidic droplet interface bilayers (DIBs, generated at a rate of 480 per minute) and benchmark this system by monitoring fluorescent dye DIB permeation over time. Enantioselective permeation of alkyne-labelled amino acids (Ala, Val, Phe, Pro) and dipeptides through a chiral phospholipid bilayer was demonstrated using DIB transport measurements; the biological l enantiomers permeated faster than the d enantiomers (from 1.2-fold to 6-fold for Ala to Pro). Enantioselective permeation both poses a potentially unanticipated criterion for drug design and offers a kinetic mechanism for the abiotic emergence of homochirality via chiral transfer between sugars, amino acids and lipids.

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