Summary: | A continuum mechanical model based on the Helfrich Hamiltonian is devised to investigate the
coupling between lipid composition and membrane curvature. Each monolayer in the bilayer is modeled as a
freely deformable surface with a director field for lipid orientation. A scalar field for the mole fraction of two
lipid types accounts for local changes in composition. It allows lipids to access monolayer regions favorable
to their intrinsic curvature at the expense of increasing entropic free energy. Hemifusion is one of the key fusion
intermediates with regions of both positive and negative membrane curvature and where proteins must
supply energy in order to bring about large elastic distortions. Using a numerical gradient descent scheme,
minimal energy axisymmetric shapes of hemifusion diaphragms are calculated for varying radii. Previous
studies assumed a fixed, weighted average for spontaneous curvature. Allowing for local changes in spontaneous
curvature yields energies and forces of expansion significantly lower than those obtained from a fixed
composition.
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