Measurement of the nonlinear elasticity of red blood cell membranes

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The membranes of human red blood cells (RBCs) are a composite of a fluid lipid bilayer and a triangular network of semiflexible filaments (spectrin). We perform cellular microrheology using the dynamic membrane fluctuations of the RBCs to extract the elastic moduli of this composite membrane. By applying known osmotic stresses, we measure the changes in the elastic constants under imposed strain and thereby determine the nonlinear elastic properties of the membrane. We find that the elastic nonlinearities of the shear modulus in tensed RBC membranes can be well understood in terms of a simple wormlike chain model. Our results show that the elasticity of the spectrin network can mostly account for the area compression modulus at physiological osmolality, suggesting that the lipid bilayer has significant excess area. As the cell swells, the elastic contribution from the now tensed lipid membrane becomes dominant.
Publisher
AMER PHYSICAL SOC
Issue Date
2011-05
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Citation

PHYSICAL REVIEW E, v.83, no.5

ISSN
1539-3755
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/99213
Appears in Collection
PH-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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