from Part II - Self assembly
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 January 2011
This and succeeding chapters deal with how it is that molecular forces conspire with the size and shape of molecules called surfactants to associate spontaneously in solution into a myriad multimolecular aggregates. They can be ephemeral entities called micelles. Typical micelles formed by short-chained surfactants exist as entities for times of around 10−5 seconds. On the other hand they can be as long-lived as three or more months. That is so for membrane mimetic long-chained phospholipids that form complex single-walled vesicles and multi-bilayered structures. These self-assembled aggregates provide the organized microstructural scaffolding that forms the basis of biological cell membranes. Self-assembled entities direct biochemical cell traffic.
We have tried to identify conceptual developments in self assembly as they emerged over the past three decades. The result of a great deal of theorizing and experimentation is that some simple rules emerge. These allow the prediction of microstructure, as a function of components, component ratios and physicochemical solution conditions. This, combined with an understanding of how to change molecular forces via specific ion effects, gives some insights into the astonishingly complex background self-organization that occurs in biology. (The genius of DNA, RNA and proteins in biology is not in dispute. What is not generally recognized is that their work takes place within a hidden framework built from and involving the lipids, which are not just passive bystanders.)
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