Topology and Kinetic Pathways of Colloidosome Assembly and Disassembly
Topology and Kinetic Pathways of Colloidosome Assembly and Disassembly
Liquid shells, such as lipid vesicles and soap bubbles, are ubiquitous throughout biology, engineered matter, and everyday life. Their creation and disintegration are defined by a singularity that separates a topologically distinct extended liquid film from a boundary-free closed shell. Such topology-changing processes are essential for cellular transport and drug delivery. However, their studies are challenging because of the rapid dynamics and small length scale of conventional lipid vesicles. We develop fluid colloidosomes, micron-sized analogs of lipid vesicles. We study their stability close to their disk-to-sphere topological transition. Intrinsic colloidal length and time scales slow down the dynamics to reveal vesicle conformations in real time during their assembly and disassembly. Remarkably, the lowest-energy pathway by which a closed vesicle transforms into a disk involves a topologically distinct cylinder-like intermediate. These results reveal universal aspects of topological changes in all liquid shells and a robust platform for the encapsulation, transport, and delivery of nanosized cargoes.
Raymond Adkins、Joanna Robaszewski、Seungwoo Shin、Fridtjof Brauns、Leroy Jia、Ayantika Khanra、Prerna Sharma、Robert Pelcovits、Thomas R. Powers、Zvonimir Dogic
生物物理学细胞生物学生物化学
Raymond Adkins,Joanna Robaszewski,Seungwoo Shin,Fridtjof Brauns,Leroy Jia,Ayantika Khanra,Prerna Sharma,Robert Pelcovits,Thomas R. Powers,Zvonimir Dogic.Topology and Kinetic Pathways of Colloidosome Assembly and Disassembly[EB/OL].(2025-04-06)[2025-05-14].https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.04628.点此复制
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