4.5 Review

Motile behaviour of droplets in lipid systems

Journal

NATURE REVIEWS CHEMISTRY
Volume 6, Issue 6, Pages 377-388

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41570-022-00392-8

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Research Council [772564]
  2. Dutch Ministry of Education, Culture and Science (Gravity Program) [FMS 024.001.035]
  3. European Research Council (ERC) [772564] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Motility is crucial for living organisms, and understanding the emergence mechanisms of this evolutionary asset can provide valuable insights. This review focuses on the movement of droplets in lipid systems and discusses chemotactic behaviors driven by fluctuations in interfacial tension. It highlights the ability of droplets to adapt their movement to illumination conditions and explores examples where chemical reactivity brings complexity to motility.
Motility is the capacity for living organisms to move autonomously and with purpose, and is essential to life. The transition from abiotic chemistry into motile cellular compartments has yet to be understood, but motile behaviour likely followed chemical evolution because primeval cell survival depended on scouting for resources effectively. Minimalistic motile systems provide an experimental framework to delineate the emergence mechanisms of such an evolutionary asset. In this Review, we discuss frontier developments in controlling the movement of droplets in lipid systems, in particular, chemotactic behaviours driven by fluctuations in interfacial tension, because of its simple mechanism and prebiotic relevance. Although most efforts have focused on designing oil droplet motility in lipid-rich aqueous solutions, we highlight that water droplets can also move in lipid-enriched oils. First, we describe how droplets evolve chemotactic motility in lipid systems. Next, we review how these oil droplets can adapt their movement to illumination conditions. Finally, we discuss examples where chemical reactivity brings complexity to motility. This work contributes to systems chemistry, where chemical reactions combined with physicochemical phenomena can yield new functions, such that a limited set of molecules can promote complex movement at larger functional scales by following the rules of molecular chemistry.

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