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Dive into the research topics where Lucia Parolini is active.

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Featured researches published by Lucia Parolini.


Nature Communications | 2015

Volume and porosity thermal regulation in lipid mesophases by coupling mobile ligands to soft membranes

Lucia Parolini; Bortolo Matteo Mognetti; Jurij Kotar; Erika Eiser; Pietro Cicuta; Lorenzo Di Michele

Short DNA linkers are increasingly being exploited for driving-specific self-assembly of Brownian objects. DNA-functionalized colloids can assemble into ordered or amorphous materials with tailored morphology. Recently, the same approach has been applied to compliant units, including emulsion droplets and lipid vesicles. The liquid structure of these substrates introduces new degrees of freedom: the tethers can diffuse and rearrange, radically changing the physics of the interactions. Unlike droplets, vesicles are extremely deformable and DNA-mediated adhesion causes significant shape adjustments. We investigate experimentally the thermal response of pairs and networks of DNA-tethered liposomes and observe two intriguing and possibly useful collective properties: negative thermal expansion and tuneable porosity of the liposome networks. A model providing a thorough understanding of this unexpected phenomenon is developed, explaining the emergent properties out of the interplay between the temperature-dependent deformability of the vesicles and the DNA-mediated adhesive forces.


ACS Nano | 2016

Controlling Self-Assembly Kinetics of DNA-Functionalized Liposomes Using Toehold Exchange Mechanism

Lucia Parolini; Jurij Kotar; Lorenzo Di Michele; Bortolo Matteo Mognetti

The selectivity of Watson-Crick base pairing has allowed the design of DNA-based functional materials bearing an unprecedented level of accuracy. Examples include DNA origami, made of tiles assembling into arbitrarily complex shapes, and DNA coated particles featuring rich phase behaviors. Frequently, the realization of conceptual DNA-nanotechnology designs has been hampered by the lack of strategies for effectively controlling relaxations. In this article, we address the problem of kinetic control on DNA-mediated interactions between Brownian objects. We design a kinetic pathway based on toehold-exchange mechanisms that enables rearrangement of DNA bonds without the need for thermal denaturation, and test it on suspensions of DNA-functionalized liposomes, demonstrating tunability of aggregation rates over more than 1 order of magnitude. While the possibility to design complex phase behaviors using DNA as a glue is already well recognized, our results demonstrate control also over the kinetics of such systems.


Plant Physiology | 2016

Hydrocarbons Are Essential for Optimal Cell Size, Division, and Growth of Cyanobacteria

David J. Lea-Smith; Maite L. Ortiz-Suarez; Tchern Lenn; Dennis J. Nürnberg; Laura L. Baers; Matthew P. Davey; Lucia Parolini; Roland G. Huber; Charles A. R. Cotton; Giulia Mastroianni; Paolo Bombelli; Petra Ungerer; Tim J. Stevens; Alison G. Smith; Peter J. Bond; Conrad W. Mullineaux; Christopher J. Howe

Optimal growth and division of cyanobacteria depends upon hydrocarbon induced flexibility in the thylakoid membranes of cyanobacteria, via accumulation of these compounds within the lipid bilayer. Cyanobacteria are intricately organized, incorporating an array of internal thylakoid membranes, the site of photosynthesis, into cells no larger than other bacteria. They also synthesize C15-C19 alkanes and alkenes, which results in substantial production of hydrocarbons in the environment. All sequenced cyanobacteria encode hydrocarbon biosynthesis pathways, suggesting an important, undefined physiological role for these compounds. Here, we demonstrate that hydrocarbon-deficient mutants of Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 and Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 exhibit significant phenotypic differences from wild type, including enlarged cell size, reduced growth, and increased division defects. Photosynthetic rates were similar between strains, although a minor reduction in energy transfer between the soluble light harvesting phycobilisome complex and membrane-bound photosystems was observed. Hydrocarbons were shown to accumulate in thylakoid and cytoplasmic membranes. Modeling of membranes suggests these compounds aggregate in the center of the lipid bilayer, potentially promoting membrane flexibility and facilitating curvature. In vivo measurements confirmed that Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002 mutants lacking hydrocarbons exhibit reduced thylakoid membrane curvature compared to wild type. We propose that hydrocarbons may have a role in inducing the flexibility in membranes required for optimal cell division, size, and growth, and efficient association of soluble and membrane bound proteins. The recent identification of C15-C17 alkanes and alkenes in microalgal species suggests hydrocarbons may serve a similar function in a broad range of photosynthetic organisms.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2016

Communication: Free energy of ligand-receptor systems forming multimeric complexes

Lorenzo Di Michele; Stephan Jan Bachmann; Lucia Parolini; Bortolo Matteo Mognetti

Ligand-receptor interactions are ubiquitous in biology and have become popular in materials in view of their applications to programmable self-assembly. Although complex functionalities often emerge from the simultaneous interaction of more than just two linker molecules, state of the art theoretical frameworks enable the calculation of the free energy only in systems featuring one-to-one ligand/receptor binding. In this Communication, we derive a general formula to calculate the free energy of systems featuring simultaneous direct interaction between an arbitrary number of linkers. To exemplify the potential and generality of our approach, we apply it to the systems recently introduced by Parolini et al. [ACS Nano 10, 2392 (2016)] and Halverson and Tkachenko [J. Chem. Phys. 144, 094903 (2016)], both featuring functionalized Brownian particles interacting via three-linker complexes.


Soft Matter | 2016

Melting transition in lipid vesicles functionalised by mobile DNA linkers

Stephan Jan Bachmann; Jurij Kotar; Lucia Parolini; Anđela Šarić; Pietro Cicuta; Lorenzo Di Michele; Bortolo Matteo Mognetti

We study phase behaviour of lipid-bilayer vesicles functionalised by ligand–receptor complexes made of synthetic DNA by introducing a modelling framework and a dedicated experimental platform. In particular, we perform Monte Carlo simulations that combine a coarse grained description of the lipid bilayer with state of art analytical models for multivalent ligand–receptor interactions. Using density of state calculations, we derive the partition function in pairs of vesicles and compute the number of ligand–receptor bonds as a function of temperature. Numerical results are compared to microscopy and fluorimetry experiments on large unilamellar vesicles decorated by DNA linkers carrying complementary overhangs. We find that vesicle aggregation is suppressed when the total number of linkers falls below a threshold value. Within the model proposed here, this is due to the higher configurational costs required to form inter-vesicle bridges as compared to intra-vesicle loops, which are in turn related to membrane deformability. Our findings and our numerical/experimental methodologies are applicable to the rational design of liposomes used as functional materials and drug delivery applications, as well as to study inter-membrane interactions in living systems, such as cell adhesion.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Thermal-driven domain and cargo transport in lipid membranes

Emma Louise Talbot; Lucia Parolini; Jurij Kotar; Lorenzo Di Michele; Pietro Cicuta

Significance Giant phospholipid and sterol vesicles can separate into coexisting phase domains, observable by fluorescence microscopy. The morphology and motility of these domains provides a simplified model for processes in the plasma membrane of cells. Previous studies maintained a uniform temperature across a vesicle and showed that the morphology of the domains depends on the membrane composition and temperature. We observed the nonequilibrium behavior of domains due to a temperature gradient, revealing domain migration toward higher temperatures. This motion provides a method for controlling the localization of each phase. Species that associate with the sterol-rich regions, such as DNA constructs, can also be actively transported on the vesicle surface, allowing control over the distribution and confinement of that species via vesicle morphology. Domain migration is observed on the surface of ternary giant unilamellar vesicles held in a temperature gradient in conditions where they exhibit coexistence of two liquid phases. The migration localizes domains to the hot side of the vesicle, regardless of whether the domain is composed of the more ordered or disordered phase and regardless of the proximity to chamber boundaries. The distribution of domains is explored for domains that coarsen and for those held apart due to long-range repulsions. After considering several potential mechanisms for the migration, including the temperature preferences for each lipid, the favored curvature for each phase, and the thermophoretic flow around the vesicle, we show that observations are consistent with the general process of minimizing the system’s line tension energy, because of the lowering of line interface energy closer to mixing. DNA strands, attached to the lipid bilayer with cholesterol anchors, act as an exemplar “cargo,” demonstrating that the directed motion of domains toward higher temperatures provides a route to relocate species that preferentially reside in the domains.


Archive | 2017

Research data supporting: Thermal driven domain and cargo transport in lipid membranes

Emma Louise Talbot; Lucia Parolini; Jurij Kotar; L Di Michele; Pietro Cicuta

The dataset contains data on the motion and distribution of lipid domains on the membrane of giant unilamellar vesicles in thermal gradients. Each compressed folder contains .tiff images of the fluorescence microscopy data for phase separated vesicles, displayed as Matlab plots with axes labelled in pixels. Each pixel is equal to 0.145 micrometers. There is one compressed folder including the data for each figures 1C, 2B, 2C, 2D, and 6B. As well as images used to track the domains for Fig. 6A. Please refer to the paper for further details. Images are given for the hot and cold caps of vesicles at time t =xmin i.e. folder “t 0min cold” contains images of the cold side of vesicles in a thermal gradient after 0 minutes. The data in the manuscript are obtained from an average of e.g. the domain spacing, domain number or area fraction of white domains for each vesicle in the corresponding folder.


Archive | 2016

Research data supporting “Melting transition in lipid vesicles functionalised by mobile DNA linkers”

Stephan Jan Bachmann; Jurij Kotar; Lucia Parolini; Andela Saric; Pietro Cicuta; Lorenzo Di Michele; Bortolo Matteo Mognetti

We study phase behaviour of lipid-bilayer vesicles functionalised by ligand-receptor complexes made of synthetic DNA by introducing a modelling framework and a dedicated experimental platform. In particular, we perform Monte Carlo simulations that combine a coarse grained description of the lipid bilayer with state of art analytical models for multivalent ligand-receptor interactions. Using density of state calculations, we derive the partition function in pairs of vesicles and compute the number of ligand-receptor bonds as a function of temperature. Numerical results are compared to microscopy and fluorimetry experiments on large unilamellar vesicles decorated by DNA linkers carrying complementary overhangs. We find that vesicle aggregation is suppressed when the total number of linkers falls below a threshold value. Within the model proposed here, this is due to the higher configurational costs required to form inter-vesicle bridges as compared to intra-vesicle loops, which are in turn related to membrane deformability. Our findings and our numerical/experimental methodologies are applicable to the rational design of liposomes used as functional materials and drug delivery applications, as well as to study inter-membrane interactions in living systems, such as cell adhesion.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2015

Direct measurement of DNA-mediated adhesion between lipid bilayers

Shunsuke Shimobayashi; Bortolo Matteo Mognetti; Lucia Parolini; Davide Orsi; Pietro Cicuta; L. Di Michele


Nature Communications | 2017

Thermophoretic migration of vesicles depends on mean temperature and head group chemistry

Emma Louise Talbot; Jurij Kotar; Lucia Parolini; Lorenzo Di Michele; Pietro Cicuta

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Jurij Kotar

University of Cambridge

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Bortolo Matteo Mognetti

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Stephan Jan Bachmann

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Erika Eiser

University of Cambridge

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Anđela Šarić

University College London

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