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Dive into the research topics where Iván López-Montero is active.

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Featured researches published by Iván López-Montero.


Biophysical Journal | 2009

Stiffening Effect of Cholesterol on Disordered Lipid Phases: A Combined Neutron Spin Echo + Dynamic Light Scattering Analysis of the Bending Elasticity of Large Unilamellar Vesicles

Laura R. Arriaga; Iván López-Montero; Francisco Monroy; Guillermo Orts-Gil; B. Farago; Thomas Hellweg

In this study, the center-of-mass diffusion and shape fluctuations of large unilamellar 1-palmitoyl-2-oleyl-sn-glycero-phosphatidylcholine vesicles prepared by extrusion are studied by means of neutron spin echo in combination with dynamic light scattering. The intermediate scattering functions were measured for several different values of the momentum transfer, q, and for different cholesterol contents in the membrane. The combined analysis of neutron spin echo and dynamic light scattering data allows calculation of the bending elastic constant, kappa, of the vesicle bilayer. A stiffening effect monitored as an increase of kappa with increasing cholesterol molar ratio is demonstrated by these measurements.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Shear rheology of lipid monolayers and insights on membrane fluidity.

Gabriel Espinosa; Iván López-Montero; Francisco Monroy; Dominique Langevin

The concept of membrane fluidity usually refers to a high molecular mobility inside the lipid bilayer which enables lateral diffusion of embedded proteins. Fluids have the ability to flow under an applied shear stress whereas solids resist shear deformations. Biological membranes require both properties for their function: high lateral fluidity and structural rigidity. Consequently, an adequate account must include, in addition to viscosity, the possibility for a nonzero shear modulus. This knowledge is still lacking as measurements of membrane shear properties have remained incomplete so far. In the present contribution we report a surface shear rheology study of different lipid monolayers that model distinct biologically relevant situations. The results evidence a large variety of mechanical behavior under lateral shear flow.


Soft Matter | 2011

Polymersomes: smart vesicles of tunable rigidity and permeability

Ruddi Rodríguez-García; Michael Mell; Iván López-Montero; Jeanette Netzel; Thomas Hellweg; Francisco Monroy

We report an experimental study on the mechanical and permeability properties of giant polymersomes made of diblock (PBD–PEO) and triblock (PEO–PPO–PEO) copolymers. These polymer amphiphiles bear the architecture and macromolecular dimensions adequate for assembling stable flat bilayers with a different hydrophobicity. In the highly hydrophobic case (PBD–PEO) an extremely compact membrane is formed, resulting in rigid polymersomes which represent a permeability barrier against solute transport across. In the case of water soluble PEO–PPO–PEO triblock copolymers, the bilayer structure is less stable in favour of the micellar state; therefore giant vesicles can be solely formed at large PPO contents. These cases (Pluronics® L121 and its mixtures with P85 and P105) are characterised by a much lower chain entangling than highly hydrophobic membranes, their polymersomes being softer than those based on PBD–PEO. Pluronic-based polymersomes are also found to be highly permeable to hydrophilic solutes, even remaining undamaged in the case of an extreme osmotic shock. This high permeability together with their high flexibility endows Pluronics polymersomes smart core/shell properties ideal to catch large biomolecules inside and able to resist under osmotic and mechanical stresses.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Flippase Activity Detected with Unlabeled Lipids by Shape Changes of Giant Unilamellar Vesicles

Andreas Papadopulos; Stefanie Vehring; Iván López-Montero; Lara Kutschenko; Martin Stöckl; Philippe F. Devaux; Michael M. Kozlov; Thomas Günther Pomorski; Andreas Herrmann

Transbilayer movement of phospholipids in biological membranes is mediated by energy-dependent and energy-independent flippases. Available methods for detection of flippase mediated transversal flip-flop are essentially based on spin-labeled or fluorescent lipid analogues. Here we demonstrate that shape change of giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) can be used as a new tool to study the occurrence and time scale of flippase-mediated transbilayer movement of unlabeled phospholipids. Insertion of lipids into the external leaflet created an area difference between the two leaflets that caused the formation of a bud-like structure. Under conditions of negligible flip-flop, the bud was stable. Upon reconstitution of the energy-independent flippase activity of the yeast endoplasmic reticulum into GUVs, the initial bud formation was reversible, and the shapes were recovered. This can be ascribed to a rapid flip-flop leading to relaxation of the monolayer area difference. Theoretical analysis of kinetics of shape changes provides self-consistent determination of the flip-flop rate and further kinetic parameters. Based on that analysis, the half-time of phospholipid flip-flop in the presence of endoplasmic reticulum proteins was found to be on the order of few minutes. In contrast, GUVs reconstituted with influenza virus protein formed stable buds. The results argue for the presence of specific membrane proteins mediating rapid flip-flop.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2010

Ceramide: from lateral segregation to mechanical stress.

Iván López-Montero; Francisco Monroy; Marisela Vélez; Philippe F. Devaux

Ceramide is a sphingolipid present in eukaryotic cells that laterally segregates into solid domains in model lipid membranes. Imaging has provided a wealth of structural information useful to understand some of the physical properties of these domains. In biological membranes, ceramide is formed on one of the membrane leaflets by enzymatic cleavage of sphyngomyelin. Ceramide, with a smaller head size than its parent compound sphyngomyelin, induces an asymmetric membrane tension and segregates into highly ordered domains that have a much high shear viscosity than that of the surrounding lipids. These physical properties, together with the rapid transmembrane flip-flop of the locally produced ceramide, trigger a sequence of membrane perturbations that could explain the molecular mechanism by which ceramide mediates different cell responses. In this review we will try to establish a connection between the physical membrane transformations in model systems known to occur upon ceramide formation and some physiologically relevant process in which ceramide is known to participate.


Biochemical Journal | 2011

A combined action of pulmonary surfactant proteins SP-B and SP-C modulates permeability and dynamics of phospholipid membranes.

Elisa Parra; Lara H. Moleiro; Iván López-Montero; Antonio Cruz; Francisco Monroy; Jesús Pérez-Gil

Proteins SP-B and SP-C are essential to promote formation of surface-active films at the respiratory interface, but their mechanism of action is still under investigation. In the present study we have analysed the effect of the proteins on the accessibility of native, quasi-native and model surfactant membranes to incorporation of the fluorescent probes Nile Red (permeable) and FM 1-43 (impermeable) into membranes. We have also analysed the effect of single or combined proteins on membrane permeation using the soluble fluorescent dye calcein. The fluorescence of FM 1-43 was always higher in membranes containing SP-B and/or SP-C than in protein-depleted membranes, in contrast with Nile Red which was very similar in all of the materials tested. SP-B and SP-C promoted probe partition with markedly different kinetics. On the other hand, physiological proportions of SP-B and SP-C caused giant oligolamellar vesicles to incorporate FM 1-43 from the external medium into apparently most of the membranes instantaneously. In contrast, oligolamellar pure lipid vesicles appeared to be mainly labelled in the outermost membrane layer. Pure lipidic vesicles were impermeable to calcein, whereas it permeated through membranes containing SP-B and/or SP-C. Vesicles containing only SP-B were stable, but prone to vesicle-vesicle interactions, whereas those containing only SP-C were extremely dynamic, undergoing frequent fluctuations and ruptures. Differential structural effects of proteins on vesicles were confirmed by electron microscopy. These results suggest that SP-B and SP-C have different contributions to inter- and intra-membrane lipid dynamics, and that their combined action could provide unique effects to modulate structure and dynamics of pulmonary surfactant membranes and films.


Biophysical Journal | 2011

Solid Character of Membrane Ceramides: A Surface Rheology Study of Their Mixtures with Sphingomyelin

Elisa R. Catapano; Laura R. Arriaga; Gabriel Espinosa; Francisco Monroy; Dominique Langevin; Iván López-Montero

The compression and shear viscoelasticities of egg-ceramide and its mixtures with sphingomyelin were investigated using oscillatory surface rheology performed on Langmuir monolayers. We found high values for the compression and shear moduli for ceramide, compatible with a solid-state membrane, and extremely high surface viscosities when compared to typical fluid lipids. A fluidlike rheological behavior was found for sphingomyelin. Lateral mobilities, measured from particle tracking experiments, were correlated with the monolayer viscosities through the usual hydrodynamic relationships. In conclusion, ceramide increases the solid character of sphingomyelin-based membranes and decreases their fluidity, thus drastically decreasing the lateral mobilities of embedded objects. This mechanical behavior may involve important physiological consequences in biological membranes containing ceramides.


European Physical Journal E | 2010

Dissipative curvature fluctuations in bilayer vesicles: Coexistence of pure-bending and hybrid curvature-compression modes

Laura R. Arriaga; Ruddi Rodríguez-García; Iván López-Montero; B. Farago; Thomas Hellweg; Francisco Monroy

We have studied the relaxation dynamics of shape fluctuations in unilamellar lipid vesicles by neutron spin echo (NSE). The presence of a hybrid curvature-compression mode coexisting with the usual bending one has been revealed in the experimental relaxation functions at high q . Differently to the conventional relaxation ∼ q3 typical for bending modes, the hybrid mode was found to relax as ∼ q2 , which is compatible with a dissipation mechanism arising from intermonolayer friction. Complementary data obtained from flickering spectroscopy (FS) in giant unilamellar vesicles confirm the existence of both modes coexisting together. By combining NSE and FS data we have depicted the experimental bimodal dispersion diagram, which is found compatible with theoretical predictions for reliable values of the material parameters. From the present data two conventional dynamical methods (NSE and FS) have been shown to be suitable for measuring intermonolayer friction coefficients in bilayer vesicles.


Chemistry and Physics of Lipids | 2010

Lipid domains and mechanical plasticity of Escherichia coli lipid monolayers

Iván López-Montero; Laura R. Arriaga; Germán Rivas; Marisela Vélez; Francisco Monroy

Lipid monolayers can be laterally dilated under the action of the barriers in a Langmuir trough thus allowing for measurements of their mechanical response. We study the stress response of Escherichia coli polar lipid extract and POPC against oscillatory deformations stressed up to a 20% of the initial area. For E. coli monolayers a nonlinear regime described by a series of Fourier harmonics of the excitation mode is found beyond a critical strain (u(C) approximately 1%). In contrast, the mechanical response of POPC monolayers is found linear upon much larger deformations. For E. coli monolayers the stress-strain plot reflects stress softening (plastic-like) behaviour whilst POPC behaves as a linear elastic body. No viscous delay with respect to the applied strain is detected in both systems, as expected for high fluid materials. The presence of phase coexistence domains as lipid reservoirs to facilitate lateral diffusion is claimed as a plausible mechanism underlying the observed mechanical plasticity.


Langmuir | 2008

High fluidity and soft elasticity of the inner membrane of Escherichia coli revealed by the surface rheology of model Langmuir monolayers.

Iván López-Montero; Laura R. Arriaga; Francisco Monroy; Germán Rivas; P. Tarazona; Marisela Vélez

We have studied the equilibrium and linear mechanical properties of model membranes of Escherichia coli built up as Langmuir monolayers of a native lipid extract using surface thermodynamics, fluorescence microscopy, and surface rheology measurements. The experimental study has been carried out at different temperatures across the physiological operative range 15-37 degrees C. Lipid phase coexistence has been revealed over a broad pressure range by fluorescence microscopy. The presence of ordered domains has been invoked to explain the emergence of shear elasticity accompanying the hydrostatic compression elasticity typical of fluid monolayers. The surface rheology measurements point out the soft character of E. coli membranes; i.e., upon deformation they react as a near-ideal compliant body with minimal energy dissipation, thus optimizing the effectiveness of external stresses in producing membrane deformations. These mechanical features appear to be independent of temperature, suggesting the existence of a passive thermoregulation mechanism.

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Dive into the Iván López-Montero's collaboration.

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Francisco Monroy

Complutense University of Madrid

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Marisela Vélez

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Paolo Natale

Complutense University of Madrid

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Lara H. Moleiro

Complutense University of Madrid

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Ruddi Rodríguez-García

Complutense University of Madrid

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Michael Mell

Complutense University of Madrid

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Ileana F. Márquez

Spanish National Research Council

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Antonio L. De Lacey

Spanish National Research Council

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