Biological membranes separate the cell from the outside environment and compartmentalize intracellular organelles. They are an important material that localizes biological interfacial reactions, interactions, and transport. The composition and organization of lipids, proteins, and other membrane-associated molecules regulate biomembrane interfacial properties and the processes occurring there. Changes in membrane composition, in disease, or upon exposure to intra/extracellular stimuli, can alter these properties/processes. This session focuses on interfacial phenomena at biomembranes, examined in live cells, artificial membrane experiments, or in silico. Topics of interest include biomembrane interfacial tension and rheology, fluidity and phase segregation, leaflet asymmetry, lipid-lipid and lipid-protein interactions, diffusive-reactive processes in the membrane, and biomembrane interactions with extracellular molecules and particles. Studies on novel methods to study biomembrane interfacial properties are also of interest.
08:00 AM
08:16 AM
08:32 AM
Nicoletta Bouzos, Wade Zeno
08:48 AM
Fizza Usmani, Harishankar Manikantan
09:04 AM
Joseph Samaniuk, Amy Chacon
09:20 AM
Monica Iepure, Maryam Darwish, Younjin Min
09:36 AM
Zachary McAllister, Cain Valtierrez-Gaytan, Alexander Smith, Joseph Zasadzinski, Joseph Barakat, Bjorn Solberg, Aidan Dosch, Benjamin Stottrup
09:52 AM
Hyeongjoo Row, Joshua B. Fernandes, Kranthi K. Mandadapu, Karthik Shekhar
10:08 AM
Joshua B. Fernandes, Hyeongjoo Row, Karthik Shekhar, Kranthi K. Mandadapu