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1 \chapter{\label{chap:md}Dipolar ordering in the ripple phases of
2 molecular-scale models of lipid membranes}
3
4 \section{Introduction}
5 \label{mdsec:Int}
6 Fully hydrated lipids will aggregate spontaneously to form bilayers
7 which exhibit a variety of phases depending on their temperatures and
8 compositions. Among these phases, a periodic rippled phase
9 ($P_{\beta'}$) appears as an intermediate phase between the gel
10 ($L_\beta$) and fluid ($L_{\alpha}$) phases for relatively pure
11 phosphatidylcholine (PC) bilayers. The ripple phase has attracted
12 substantial experimental interest over the past 30 years. Most
13 structural information of the ripple phase has been obtained by the
14 X-ray diffraction~\cite{Sun96,Katsaras00} and freeze-fracture electron
15 microscopy (FFEM).~\cite{Copeland80,Meyer96} Recently, Kaasgaard {\it
16 et al.} used atomic force microscopy (AFM) to observe ripple phase
17 morphology in bilayers supported on mica.~\cite{Kaasgaard03} The
18 experimental results provide strong support for a 2-dimensional
19 hexagonal packing lattice of the lipid molecules within the ripple
20 phase. This is a notable change from the observed lipid packing
21 within the gel phase,~\cite{Cevc87} although Tenchov {\it et al.} have
22 recently observed near-hexagonal packing in some phosphatidylcholine
23 (PC) gel phases.\cite{Tenchov2001} The X-ray diffraction work by
24 Katsaras {\it et al.} showed that a rich phase diagram exhibiting both
25 {\it asymmetric} and {\it symmetric} ripples is possible for lecithin
26 bilayers.\cite{Katsaras00}
27
28 A number of theoretical models have been presented to explain the
29 formation of the ripple phase. Marder {\it et al.} used a
30 curvature-dependent Landau-de~Gennes free-energy functional to predict
31 a rippled phase.~\cite{Marder84} This model and other related
32 continuum models predict higher fluidity in convex regions and that
33 concave portions of the membrane correspond to more solid-like
34 regions. Carlson and Sethna used a packing-competition model (in
35 which head groups and chains have competing packing energetics) to
36 predict the formation of a ripple-like phase. Their model predicted
37 that the high-curvature portions have lower-chain packing and
38 correspond to more fluid-like regions. Goldstein and Leibler used a
39 mean-field approach with a planar model for {\em inter-lamellar}
40 interactions to predict rippling in multilamellar
41 phases.~\cite{Goldstein88} McCullough and Scott proposed that the {\em
42 anisotropy of the nearest-neighbor interactions} coupled to
43 hydrophobic constraining forces which restrict height differences
44 between nearest neighbors is the origin of the ripple
45 phase.~\cite{McCullough90} Lubensky and MacKintosh introduced a Landau
46 theory for tilt order and curvature of a single membrane and concluded
47 that {\em coupling of molecular tilt to membrane curvature} is
48 responsible for the production of ripples.~\cite{Lubensky93} Misbah,
49 Duplat and Houchmandzadeh proposed that {\em inter-layer dipolar
50 interactions} can lead to ripple instabilities.~\cite{Misbah98}
51 Heimburg presented a {\em coexistence model} for ripple formation in
52 which he postulates that fluid-phase line defects cause sharp
53 curvature between relatively flat gel-phase regions.~\cite{Heimburg00}
54 Kubica has suggested that a lattice model of polar head groups could
55 be valuable in trying to understand bilayer phase
56 formation.~\cite{Kubica02} Bannerjee used Monte Carlo simulations of
57 lamellar stacks of hexagonal lattices to show that large head groups
58 and molecular tilt with respect to the membrane normal vector can
59 cause bulk rippling.~\cite{Bannerjee02} Recently, Kranenburg and Smit
60 described the formation of symmetric ripple-like structures using a
61 coarse grained solvent-head-tail bead model.\cite{Kranenburg2005}
62 Their lipids consisted of a short chain of head beads tied to the two
63 longer ``chains''.
64
65 In contrast, few large-scale molecular modeling studies have been
66 done due to the large size of the resulting structures and the time
67 required for the phases of interest to develop. With all-atom (and
68 even unified-atom) simulations, only one period of the ripple can be
69 observed and only for time scales in the range of 10-100 ns. One of
70 the most interesting molecular simulations was carried out by de~Vries
71 {\it et al.}~\cite{deVries05}. According to their simulation results,
72 the ripple consists of two domains, one resembling the gel bilayer,
73 while in the other, the two leaves of the bilayer are fully
74 interdigitated. The mechanism for the formation of the ripple phase
75 suggested by their work is a packing competition between the head
76 groups and the tails of the lipid molecules.\cite{Carlson87} Recently,
77 the ripple phase has also been studied by Lenz and Schmid using Monte
78 Carlo simulations.\cite{Lenz07} Their structures are similar to the De
79 Vries {\it et al.} structures except that the connection between the
80 two leaves of the bilayer is a narrow interdigitated line instead of
81 the fully interdigitated domain. The symmetric ripple phase was also
82 observed by Lenz {\it et al.}, and their work supports other claims
83 that the mismatch between the size of the head group and tail of the
84 lipid molecules is the driving force for the formation of the ripple
85 phase. Ayton and Voth have found significant undulations in
86 zero-surface-tension states of membranes simulated via dissipative
87 particle dynamics, but their results are consistent with purely
88 thermal undulations.~\cite{Ayton02}
89
90 Although the organization of the tails of lipid molecules are
91 addressed by these molecular simulations and the packing competition
92 between head groups and tails is strongly implicated as the primary
93 driving force for ripple formation, questions about the ordering of
94 the head groups in ripple phase have not been settled.
95
96 In a recent paper, we presented a simple ``web of dipoles'' spin
97 lattice model which provides some physical insight into relationship
98 between dipolar ordering and membrane buckling.\cite{sun:031602} We
99 found that dipolar elastic membranes can spontaneously buckle, forming
100 ripple-like topologies. The driving force for the buckling of dipolar
101 elastic membranes is the anti-ferroelectric ordering of the dipoles.
102 This was evident in the ordering of the dipole director axis
103 perpendicular to the wave vector of the surface ripples. A similar
104 phenomenon has also been observed by Tsonchev {\it et al.} in their
105 work on the spontaneous formation of dipolar peptide chains into
106 curved nano-structures.\cite{Tsonchev04,Tsonchev04II}
107
108 In this paper, we construct a somewhat more realistic molecular-scale
109 lipid model than our previous ``web of dipoles'' and use molecular
110 dynamics simulations to elucidate the role of the head group dipoles
111 in the formation and morphology of the ripple phase. We describe our
112 model and computational methodology in section \ref{mdsec:method}.
113 Details on the simulations are presented in section
114 \ref{mdsec:experiment}, with results following in section
115 \ref{mdsec:results}. A final discussion of the role of dipolar heads in
116 the ripple formation can be found in section
117 \ref{mdsec:discussion}.
118
119 \section{Computational Model}
120 \label{mdsec:method}
121
122 \begin{figure}
123 \centering
124 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{./figures/mdLipidModels.pdf}
125 \caption{Three different representations of DPPC lipid molecules,
126 including the chemical structure, an atomistic model, and the
127 head-body ellipsoidal coarse-grained model used in this
128 work.\label{mdfig:lipidModels}}
129 \end{figure}
130
131 Our simple molecular-scale lipid model for studying the ripple phase
132 is based on two facts: one is that the most essential feature of lipid
133 molecules is their amphiphilic structure with polar head groups and
134 non-polar tails. Another fact is that the majority of lipid molecules
135 in the ripple phase are relatively rigid (i.e. gel-like) which makes
136 some fraction of the details of the chain dynamics negligible. Figure
137 \ref{mdfig:lipidModels} shows the molecular structure of a DPPC
138 molecule, as well as atomistic and molecular-scale representations of
139 a DPPC molecule. The hydrophilic character of the head group is
140 largely due to the separation of charge between the nitrogen and
141 phosphate groups. The zwitterionic nature of the PC headgroups leads
142 to abnormally large dipole moments (as high as 20.6 D), and this
143 strongly polar head group interacts strongly with the solvating water
144 layers immediately surrounding the membrane. The hydrophobic tail
145 consists of fatty acid chains. In our molecular scale model, lipid
146 molecules have been reduced to these essential features; the fatty
147 acid chains are represented by an ellipsoid with a dipolar ball
148 perched on one end to represent the effects of the charge-separated
149 head group. In real PC lipids, the direction of the dipole is
150 nearly perpendicular to the tail, so we have fixed the direction of
151 the point dipole rigidly in this orientation.
152
153 The ellipsoidal portions of the model interact via the Gay-Berne
154 potential which has seen widespread use in the liquid crystal
155 community. Ayton and Voth have also used Gay-Berne ellipsoids for
156 modeling large length-scale properties of lipid
157 bilayers.\cite{Ayton01} In its original form, the Gay-Berne potential
158 was a single site model for the interactions of rigid ellipsoidal
159 molecules.\cite{Gay1981} It can be thought of as a modification of the
160 Gaussian overlap model originally described by Berne and
161 Pechukas.\cite{Berne72} The potential is constructed in the familiar
162 form of the Lennard-Jones function using orientation-dependent
163 $\sigma$ and $\epsilon$ parameters,
164 \begin{equation*}
165 V_{ij}({\mathbf{\hat u}_i}, {\mathbf{\hat u}_j}, {\mathbf{\hat
166 r}_{ij}}) = 4\epsilon ({\mathbf{\hat u}_i}, {\mathbf{\hat u}_j},
167 {\mathbf{\hat r}_{ij}})\left[\left(\frac{\sigma_0}{r_{ij}-\sigma({\mathbf{\hat u}_i},
168 {\mathbf{\hat u}_j}, {\mathbf{\hat r}_{ij}})+\sigma_0}\right)^{12}
169 -\left(\frac{\sigma_0}{r_{ij}-\sigma({\mathbf{\hat u}_i}, {\mathbf{\hat u}_j},
170 {\mathbf{\hat r}_{ij}})+\sigma_0}\right)^6\right]
171 \label{mdeq:gb}
172 \end{equation*}
173
174 The range $(\sigma({\bf \hat{u}}_{i},{\bf \hat{u}}_{j},{\bf
175 \hat{r}}_{ij}))$, and strength $(\epsilon({\bf \hat{u}}_{i},{\bf
176 \hat{u}}_{j},{\bf \hat{r}}_{ij}))$ parameters
177 are dependent on the relative orientations of the two molecules (${\bf
178 \hat{u}}_{i},{\bf \hat{u}}_{j}$) as well as the direction of the
179 intermolecular separation (${\bf \hat{r}}_{ij}$). $\sigma$ and
180 $\sigma_0$ are also governed by shape mixing and anisotropy variables,
181 \begin {eqnarray*}
182 \sigma_0 & = & \sqrt{d_i^2 + d_j^2} \\ \\
183 \chi & = & \left[ \frac{\left( l_i^2 - d_i^2 \right) \left(l_j^2 -
184 d_j^2 \right)}{\left( l_j^2 + d_i^2 \right) \left(l_i^2 +
185 d_j^2 \right)}\right]^{1/2} \\ \\
186 \alpha^2 & = & \left[ \frac{\left( l_i^2 - d_i^2 \right) \left(l_j^2 +
187 d_i^2 \right)}{\left( l_j^2 - d_j^2 \right) \left(l_i^2 +
188 d_j^2 \right)}\right]^{1/2},
189 \end{eqnarray*}
190 where $l$ and $d$ describe the length and width of each uniaxial
191 ellipsoid. These shape anisotropy parameters can then be used to
192 calculate the range function,
193 \begin{equation*}
194 \sigma({\bf \hat{u}}_{i},{\bf \hat{u}}_{j},{\bf \hat{r}}_{ij}) = \sigma_{0}
195 \left[ 1- \left\{ \frac{ \chi \alpha^2 ({\bf \hat{u}}_i \cdot {\bf
196 \hat{r}}_{ij} ) + \chi \alpha^{-2} ({\bf \hat{u}}_j \cdot {\bf
197 \hat{r}}_{ij} ) - 2 \chi^2 ({\bf \hat{u}}_i \cdot {\bf
198 \hat{r}}_{ij} )({\bf \hat{u}}_j \cdot {\bf
199 \hat{r}}_{ij} ) ({\bf \hat{u}}_i \cdot {\bf \hat{u}}_j)}{1 - \chi^2
200 \left({\bf \hat{u}}_i \cdot {\bf \hat{u}}_j\right)^2} \right\}
201 \right]^{-1/2}
202 \end{equation*}
203
204 Gay-Berne ellipsoids also have an energy scaling parameter,
205 $\epsilon^s$, which describes the well depth for two identical
206 ellipsoids in a {\it side-by-side} configuration. Additionally, a well
207 depth aspect ratio, $\epsilon^r = \epsilon^e / \epsilon^s$, describes
208 the ratio between the well depths in the {\it end-to-end} and
209 side-by-side configurations. As in the range parameter, a set of
210 mixing and anisotropy variables can be used to describe the well
211 depths for dissimilar particles,
212 \begin {eqnarray*}
213 \epsilon_0 & = & \sqrt{\epsilon^s_i * \epsilon^s_j} \\ \\
214 \epsilon^r & = & \sqrt{\epsilon^r_i * \epsilon^r_j} \\ \\
215 \chi' & = & \frac{1 - (\epsilon^r)^{1/\mu}}{1 + (\epsilon^r)^{1/\mu}}
216 \\ \\
217 \alpha'^2 & = & \left[1 + (\epsilon^r)^{1/\mu}\right]^{-1}
218 \end{eqnarray*}
219 The form of the strength function is somewhat complicated,
220 \begin {eqnarray*}
221 \epsilon({\bf \hat{u}}_{i}, {\bf \hat{u}}_{j},{\bf \hat{r}}_{ij}) & = &
222 \epsilon_{0} \epsilon_{1}^{\nu}({\bf \hat{u}}_{i}.{\bf \hat{u}}_{j})
223 \epsilon_{2}^{\mu}({\bf \hat{u}}_{i},{\bf \hat{u}}_{j},{\bf
224 \hat{r}}_{ij}) \\ \\
225 \epsilon_{1}({\bf \hat{u}}_{i},{\bf \hat{u}}_{j}) & = &
226 \left[1-\chi^{2}({\bf \hat{u}}_{i}.{\bf
227 \hat{u}}_{j})^{2}\right]^{-1/2} \\ \\
228 \epsilon_{2}({\bf \hat{u}}_{i},{\bf \hat{u}}_{j},{\bf \hat{r}}_{ij}) &
229 = &
230 1 - \left\{ \frac{ \chi' \alpha'^2 ({\bf \hat{u}}_i \cdot {\bf
231 \hat{r}}_{ij} ) + \chi' \alpha'^{-2} ({\bf \hat{u}}_j \cdot {\bf
232 \hat{r}}_{ij} ) - 2 \chi'^2 ({\bf \hat{u}}_i \cdot {\bf
233 \hat{r}}_{ij} )({\bf \hat{u}}_j \cdot {\bf
234 \hat{r}}_{ij} ) ({\bf \hat{u}}_i \cdot {\bf \hat{u}}_j)}{1 - \chi'^2
235 \left({\bf \hat{u}}_i \cdot {\bf \hat{u}}_j\right)^2} \right\},
236 \end {eqnarray*}
237 although many of the quantities and derivatives are identical with
238 those obtained for the range parameter. Ref. \citen{Luckhurst90}
239 has a particularly good explanation of the choice of the Gay-Berne
240 parameters $\mu$ and $\nu$ for modeling liquid crystal molecules. An
241 excellent overview of the computational methods that can be used to
242 efficiently compute forces and torques for this potential can be found
243 in Ref. \citen{Golubkov06}
244
245 The choices of parameters we have used in this study correspond to a
246 shape anisotropy of 3 for the chain portion of the molecule. In
247 principle, this could be varied to allow for modeling of longer or
248 shorter chain lipid molecules. For these prolate ellipsoids, we have:
249 \begin{equation}
250 \begin{array}{rcl}
251 d & < & l \\
252 \epsilon^{r} & < & 1
253 \end{array}
254 \end{equation}
255 A sketch of the various structural elements of our molecular-scale
256 lipid / solvent model is shown in figure \ref{mdfig:lipidModel}. The
257 actual parameters used in our simulations are given in table
258 \ref{mdtab:parameters}.
259
260 \begin{figure}
261 \centering
262 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{./figures/md2LipidModel.pdf}
263 \caption{The parameters defining the behavior of the lipid
264 models. $\sigma_h / d$ is the ratio of the head group to body diameter.
265 Molecular bodies had a fixed aspect ratio of 3.0. The solvent model
266 was a simplified 4-water bead ($\sigma_w \approx d$) that has been
267 used in other coarse-grained simulations. The dipolar strength
268 (and the temperature and pressure) were the only other parameters that
269 were varied systematically.\label{mdfig:lipidModel}}
270 \end{figure}
271
272 To take into account the permanent dipolar interactions of the
273 zwitterionic head groups, we have placed fixed dipole moments
274 $\mu_{i}$ at one end of the Gay-Berne particles. The dipoles are
275 oriented at an angle $\theta = \pi / 2$ relative to the major axis.
276 These dipoles are protected by a head ``bead'' with a range parameter
277 ($\sigma_h$) which we have varied between $1.20 d$ and $1.41 d$. The
278 head groups interact with each other using a combination of
279 Lennard-Jones,
280 \begin{equation}
281 V_{ij}(r_{ij}) = 4\epsilon_h \left[\left(\frac{\sigma_h}{r_{ij}}\right)^{12} -
282 \left(\frac{\sigma_h}{r_{ij}}\right)^6\right],
283 \end{equation}
284 and dipole-dipole,
285 \begin{equation}
286 V_{ij}({\bf \hat{u}}_{i},{\bf \hat{u}}_{j},{\bf
287 \hat{r}}_{ij})) = \frac{|\mu|^2}{4 \pi \epsilon_0 r_{ij}^3}
288 \left[ \hat{\bf u}_i \cdot \hat{\bf u}_j - 3 (\hat{\bf u}_i \cdot
289 \hat{\bf r}_{ij})(\hat{\bf u}_j \cdot \hat{\bf r}_{ij}) \right]
290 \end{equation}
291 potentials.
292 In these potentials, $\mathbf{\hat u}_i$ is the unit vector pointing
293 along dipole $i$ and $\mathbf{\hat r}_{ij}$ is the unit vector
294 pointing along the inter-dipole vector $\mathbf{r}_{ij}$.
295
296 Since the charge separation distance is so large in zwitterionic head
297 groups (like the PC head groups), it would also be possible to use
298 either point charges or a ``split dipole'' approximation,
299 \begin{equation}
300 V_{ij}({\bf \hat{u}}_{i},{\bf \hat{u}}_{j},{\bf
301 \hat{r}}_{ij})) = \frac{1}{{4\pi \epsilon_0 }}\left[ {\frac{{\mu _i \cdot \mu _j }}{{R_{ij}^3 }} -
302 \frac{{3\left( {\mu _i \cdot r_{ij} } \right)\left( {\mu _i \cdot
303 r_{ij} } \right)}}{{R_{ij}^5 }}} \right]
304 \end{equation}
305 where $\mu _i$ and $\mu _j$ are the dipole moments of sites $i$ and
306 $j$, $r_{ij}$ is vector between the two sites, and $R_{ij}$ is given
307 by,
308 \begin{equation}
309 R_{ij} = \sqrt {r_{ij}^2 + \frac{{d_i^2 }}{4} + \frac{{d_j^2
310 }}{4}}.
311 \end{equation}
312 Here, $d_i$ and $d_j$ are charge separation distances associated with
313 each of the two dipolar sites. This approximation to the multipole
314 expansion maintains the fast fall-off of the multipole potentials but
315 lacks the normal divergences when two polar groups get close to one
316 another.
317
318 For the interaction between nonequivalent uniaxial ellipsoids (in this
319 case, between spheres and ellipsoids), the spheres are treated as
320 ellipsoids with an aspect ratio of 1 ($d = l$) and with an well depth
321 ratio ($\epsilon^r$) of 1 ($\epsilon^e = \epsilon^s$). The form of
322 the Gay-Berne potential we are using was generalized by Cleaver {\it
323 et al.} and is appropriate for dissimilar uniaxial
324 ellipsoids.\cite{Cleaver96}
325
326 The solvent model in our simulations is similar to the one used by
327 Marrink {\it et al.} in their coarse grained simulations of lipid
328 bilayers.\cite{Marrink2004} The solvent bead is a single site that
329 represents four water molecules (m = 72 amu) and has comparable
330 density and diffusive behavior to liquid water. However, since there
331 are no electrostatic sites on these beads, this solvent model cannot
332 replicate the dielectric properties of water. Note that although we
333 are using larger cutoff and switching radii than Marrink {\it et al.},
334 our solvent density at 300 K remains at 0.944 g cm$^{-3}$, and the
335 solvent diffuses at 0.43 \AA$^2 ps^{-1}$ (only twice as fast as liquid
336 water).
337
338 \begin{table*}
339 \begin{minipage}{\linewidth}
340 \begin{center}
341 \caption{Potential parameters used for molecular-scale coarse-grained
342 lipid simulations}
343 \begin{tabular}{llccc}
344 \hline
345 & & Head & Chain & Solvent \\
346 \hline
347 $d$ (\AA) & & varied & 4.6 & 4.7 \\
348 $l$ (\AA) & & $= d$ & 13.8 & 4.7 \\
349 $\epsilon^s$ (kcal/mol) & & 0.185 & 1.0 & 0.8 \\
350 $\epsilon_r$ (well-depth aspect ratio)& & 1 & 0.2 & 1 \\
351 $m$ (amu) & & 196 & 760 & 72.06 \\
352 $\overleftrightarrow{\mathsf I}$ (amu \AA$^2$) & & & & \\
353 \multicolumn{2}c{$I_{xx}$} & 1125 & 45000 & N/A \\
354 \multicolumn{2}c{$I_{yy}$} & 1125 & 45000 & N/A \\
355 \multicolumn{2}c{$I_{zz}$} & 0 & 9000 & N/A \\
356 $\mu$ (Debye) & & varied & 0 & 0 \\
357 \end{tabular}
358 \label{mdtab:parameters}
359 \end{center}
360 \end{minipage}
361 \end{table*}
362
363 \section{Experimental Methodology}
364 \label{mdsec:experiment}
365
366 The parameters that were systematically varied in this study were the
367 size of the head group ($\sigma_h$), the strength of the dipole moment
368 ($\mu$), and the temperature of the system. Values for $\sigma_h$
369 ranged from 5.5 \AA\ to 6.5 \AA. If the width of the tails is taken
370 to be the unit of length, these head groups correspond to a range from
371 $1.2 d$ to $1.41 d$. Since the solvent beads are nearly identical in
372 diameter to the tail ellipsoids, all distances that follow will be
373 measured relative to this unit of distance. Because the solvent we
374 are using is non-polar and has a dielectric constant of 1, values for
375 $\mu$ are sampled from a range that is somewhat smaller than the 20.6
376 Debye dipole moment of the PC head groups.
377
378 To create unbiased bilayers, all simulations were started from two
379 perfectly flat monolayers separated by a 26 \AA\ gap between the
380 molecular bodies of the upper and lower leaves. The separated
381 monolayers were evolved in a vacuum with $x-y$ anisotropic pressure
382 coupling. The length of $z$ axis of the simulations was fixed and a
383 constant surface tension was applied to enable real fluctuations of
384 the bilayer. Periodic boundary conditions were used, and $480-720$
385 lipid molecules were present in the simulations, depending on the size
386 of the head beads. In all cases, the two monolayers spontaneously
387 collapsed into bilayer structures within 100 ps. Following this
388 collapse, all systems were equilibrated for $100$ ns at $300$ K.
389
390 The resulting bilayer structures were then solvated at a ratio of $6$
391 solvent beads (24 water molecules) per lipid. These configurations
392 were then equilibrated for another $30$ ns. All simulations utilizing
393 the solvent were carried out at constant pressure ($P=1$ atm) with
394 $3$D anisotropic coupling, and small constant surface tension
395 ($\gamma=0.015$ N/m). Given the absence of fast degrees of freedom in
396 this model, a time step of $50$ fs was utilized with excellent energy
397 conservation. Data collection for structural properties of the
398 bilayers was carried out during a final 5 ns run following the solvent
399 equilibration. Orientational correlation functions and diffusion
400 constants were computed from 30 ns simulations in the microcanonical
401 (NVE) ensemble using the average volume from the end of the constant
402 pressure and surface tension runs. The timestep on these final
403 molecular dynamics runs was 25 fs. No appreciable changes in phase
404 structure were noticed upon switching to a microcanonical ensemble.
405 All simulations were performed using the {\sc oopse} molecular
406 modeling program.\cite{Meineke2005}
407
408 A switching function was applied to all potentials to smoothly turn
409 off the interactions between a range of $22$ and $25$ \AA. The
410 switching function was the standard (cubic) function,
411 \begin{equation}
412 s(r) =
413 \begin{cases}
414 1 & \text{if $r \le r_{\text{sw}}$},\\
415 \frac{(r_{\text{cut}} + 2r - 3r_{\text{sw}})(r_{\text{cut}} - r)^2}
416 {(r_{\text{cut}} - r_{\text{sw}})^3}
417 & \text{if $r_{\text{sw}} < r \le r_{\text{cut}}$}, \\
418 0 & \text{if $r > r_{\text{cut}}$.}
419 \end{cases}
420 \label{mdeq:dipoleSwitching}
421 \end{equation}
422
423 \section{Results}
424 \label{mdsec:results}
425
426 The membranes in our simulations exhibit a number of interesting
427 bilayer phases. The surface topology of these phases depends most
428 sensitively on the ratio of the size of the head groups to the width
429 of the molecular bodies. With heads only slightly larger than the
430 bodies ($\sigma_h=1.20 d$) the membrane exhibits a flat bilayer.
431
432 Increasing the head / body size ratio increases the local membrane
433 curvature around each of the lipids. With $\sigma_h=1.28 d$, the
434 surface is still essentially flat, but the bilayer starts to exhibit
435 signs of instability. We have observed occasional defects where a
436 line of lipid molecules on one leaf of the bilayer will dip down to
437 interdigitate with the other leaf. This gives each of the two bilayer
438 leaves some local convexity near the line defect. These structures,
439 once developed in a simulation, are very stable and are spaced
440 approximately 100 \AA\ away from each other.
441
442 With larger heads ($\sigma_h = 1.35 d$) the membrane curvature
443 resolves into a ``symmetric'' ripple phase. Each leaf of the bilayer
444 is broken into several convex, hemicylinderical sections, and opposite
445 leaves are fitted together much like roof tiles. There is no
446 interdigitation between the upper and lower leaves of the bilayer.
447
448 For the largest head / body ratios studied ($\sigma_h = 1.41 d$) the
449 local curvature is substantially larger, and the resulting bilayer
450 structure resolves into an asymmetric ripple phase. This structure is
451 very similar to the structures observed by both de~Vries {\it et al.}
452 and Lenz {\it et al.}. For a given ripple wave vector, there are two
453 possible asymmetric ripples, which is not the case for the symmetric
454 phase observed when $\sigma_h = 1.35 d$.
455
456 \begin{figure}
457 \centering
458 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{./figures/mdPhaseCartoon.pdf}
459 \caption{The role of the ratio between the head group size and the
460 width of the molecular bodies is to increase the local membrane
461 curvature. With strong attractive interactions between the head
462 groups, this local curvature can be maintained in bilayer structures
463 through surface corrugation. Shown above are three phases observed in
464 these simulations. With $\sigma_h = 1.20 d$, the bilayer maintains a
465 flat topology. For larger heads ($\sigma_h = 1.35 d$) the local
466 curvature resolves into a symmetrically rippled phase with little or
467 no interdigitation between the upper and lower leaves of the membrane.
468 The largest heads studied ($\sigma_h = 1.41 d$) resolve into an
469 asymmetric rippled phases with interdigitation between the two
470 leaves.\label{mdfig:phaseCartoon}}
471 \end{figure}
472
473 Sample structures for the flat ($\sigma_h = 1.20 d$), symmetric
474 ($\sigma_h = 1.35 d$, and asymmetric ($\sigma_h = 1.41 d$) ripple
475 phases are shown in Figure \ref{mdfig:phaseCartoon}.
476
477 It is reasonable to ask how well the parameters we used can produce
478 bilayer properties that match experimentally known values for real
479 lipid bilayers. Using a value of $l = 13.8$ \AA for the ellipsoidal
480 tails and the fixed ellipsoidal aspect ratio of 3, our values for the
481 area per lipid ($A$) and inter-layer spacing ($D_{HH}$) depend
482 entirely on the size of the head bead relative to the molecular body.
483 These values are tabulated in table \ref{mdtab:property}. Kucera {\it
484 et al.} have measured values for the head group spacings for a number
485 of PC lipid bilayers that range from 30.8 \AA\ (DLPC) to 37.8 \AA\ (DPPC).
486 They have also measured values for the area per lipid that range from
487 60.6
488 \AA$^2$ (DMPC) to 64.2 \AA$^2$
489 (DPPC).\cite{NorbertKucerka04012005,NorbertKucerka06012006} Only the
490 largest of the head groups we modeled ($\sigma_h = 1.41 d$) produces
491 bilayers (specifically the area per lipid) that resemble real PC
492 bilayers. The smaller head beads we used are perhaps better models
493 for PE head groups.
494
495 \begin{table*}
496 \begin{minipage}{\linewidth}
497 \begin{center}
498 \caption{Phase, bilayer spacing, area per lipid, ripple wavelength
499 and amplitude observed as a function of the ratio between the head
500 beads and the diameters of the tails. Ripple wavelengths and
501 amplitudes are normalized to the diameter of the tail ellipsoids.}
502 \begin{tabular}{lccccc}
503 \hline
504 $\sigma_h / d$ & type of phase & bilayer spacing (\AA) & area per
505 lipid (\AA$^2$) & $\lambda / d$ & $A / d$\\
506 \hline
507 1.20 & flat & 33.4 & 49.6 & N/A & N/A \\
508 1.28 & flat & 33.7 & 54.7 & N/A & N/A \\
509 1.35 & symmetric ripple & 42.9 & 51.7 & 17.2 & 2.2 \\
510 1.41 & asymmetric ripple & 37.1 & 63.1 & 15.4 & 1.5 \\
511 \end{tabular}
512 \label{mdtab:property}
513 \end{center}
514 \end{minipage}
515 \end{table*}
516
517 The membrane structures and the reduced wavelength $\lambda / d$,
518 reduced amplitude $A / d$ of the ripples are summarized in Table
519 \ref{mdtab:property}. The wavelength range is $15 - 17$ molecular bodies
520 and the amplitude is $1.5$ molecular bodies for asymmetric ripple and
521 $2.2$ for symmetric ripple. These values are reasonably consistent
522 with experimental measurements.\cite{Sun96,Katsaras00,Kaasgaard03}
523 Note, that given the lack of structural freedom in the tails of our
524 model lipids, the amplitudes observed from these simulations are
525 likely to underestimate of the true amplitudes.
526
527 \begin{figure}
528 \centering
529 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{./figures/mdTopDown.pdf}
530 \caption{Top views of the flat (upper), symmetric ripple (middle),
531 and asymmetric ripple (lower) phases. Note that the head-group
532 dipoles have formed head-to-tail chains in all three of these phases,
533 but in the two rippled phases, the dipolar chains are all aligned {\it
534 perpendicular} to the direction of the ripple. Note that the flat
535 membrane has multiple vortex defects in the dipolar ordering, and the
536 ordering on the lower leaf of the bilayer can be in an entirely
537 different direction from the upper leaf.\label{mdfig:topView}}
538 \end{figure}
539
540 The principal method for observing orientational ordering in dipolar
541 or liquid crystalline systems is the $P_2$ order parameter (defined
542 as $1.5 \times \lambda_{max}$, where $\lambda_{max}$ is the largest
543 eigenvalue of the matrix,
544 \begin{equation}
545 {\mathsf{S}} = \frac{1}{N} \sum_i \left(
546 \begin{array}{ccc}
547 u^{x}_i u^{x}_i-\frac{1}{3} & u^{x}_i u^{y}_i & u^{x}_i u^{z}_i \\
548 u^{y}_i u^{x}_i & u^{y}_i u^{y}_i -\frac{1}{3} & u^{y}_i u^{z}_i \\
549 u^{z}_i u^{x}_i & u^{z}_i u^{y}_i & u^{z}_i u^{z}_i -\frac{1}{3}
550 \end{array} \right).
551 \label{mdeq:opmatrix}
552 \end{equation}
553 Here $u^{\alpha}_i$ is the $\alpha=x,y,z$ component of the unit vector
554 for molecule $i$. (Here, $\hat{\bf u}_i$ can refer either to the
555 principal axis of the molecular body or to the dipole on the head
556 group of the molecule.) $P_2$ will be $1.0$ for a perfectly-ordered
557 system and near $0$ for a randomized system. Note that this order
558 parameter is {\em not} equal to the polarization of the system. For
559 example, the polarization of a perfect anti-ferroelectric arrangement
560 of point dipoles is $0$, but $P_2$ for the same system is $1$. The
561 eigenvector of $\mathsf{S}$ corresponding to the largest eigenvalue is
562 familiar as the director axis, which can be used to determine a
563 privileged axis for an orientationally-ordered system. Since the
564 molecular bodies are perpendicular to the head group dipoles, it is
565 possible for the director axes for the molecular bodies and the head
566 groups to be completely decoupled from each other.
567
568 Figure \ref{mdfig:topView} shows snapshots of bird's-eye views of the
569 flat ($\sigma_h = 1.20 d$) and rippled ($\sigma_h = 1.35, 1.41 d$)
570 bilayers. The directions of the dipoles on the head groups are
571 represented with two colored half spheres: blue (phosphate) and yellow
572 (amino). For flat bilayers, the system exhibits signs of
573 orientational frustration; some disorder in the dipolar head-to-tail
574 chains is evident with kinks visible at the edges between differently
575 ordered domains. The lipids can also move independently of lipids in
576 the opposing leaf, so the ordering of the dipoles on one leaf is not
577 necessarily consistent with the ordering on the other. These two
578 factors keep the total dipolar order parameter relatively low for the
579 flat phases.
580
581 With increasing head group size, the surface becomes corrugated, and
582 the dipoles cannot move as freely on the surface. Therefore, the
583 translational freedom of lipids in one layer is dependent upon the
584 position of the lipids in the other layer. As a result, the ordering of
585 the dipoles on head groups in one leaf is correlated with the ordering
586 in the other leaf. Furthermore, as the membrane deforms due to the
587 corrugation, the symmetry of the allowed dipolar ordering on each leaf
588 is broken. The dipoles then self-assemble in a head-to-tail
589 configuration, and the dipolar order parameter increases dramatically.
590 However, the total polarization of the system is still close to zero.
591 This is strong evidence that the corrugated structure is an
592 anti-ferroelectric state. It is also notable that the head-to-tail
593 arrangement of the dipoles is always observed in a direction
594 perpendicular to the wave vector for the surface corrugation. This is
595 a similar finding to what we observed in our earlier work on the
596 elastic dipolar membranes.\cite{sun:031602}
597
598 The $P_2$ order parameters (for both the molecular bodies and the head
599 group dipoles) have been calculated to quantify the ordering in these
600 phases. Figure \ref{mdfig:rP2} shows that the $P_2$ order parameter for
601 the head-group dipoles increases with increasing head group size. When
602 the heads of the lipid molecules are small, the membrane is nearly
603 flat. Since the in-plane packing is essentially a close packing of the
604 head groups, the head dipoles exhibit frustration in their
605 orientational ordering.
606
607 The ordering trends for the tails are essentially opposite to the
608 ordering of the head group dipoles. The tail $P_2$ order parameter
609 {\it decreases} with increasing head size. This indicates that the
610 surface is more curved with larger head / tail size ratios. When the
611 surface is flat, all tails are pointing in the same direction (normal
612 to the bilayer surface). This simplified model appears to be
613 exhibiting a smectic A fluid phase, similar to the real $L_{\beta}$
614 phase. We have not observed a smectic C gel phase ($L_{\beta'}$) for
615 this model system. Increasing the size of the heads results in
616 rapidly decreasing $P_2$ ordering for the molecular bodies.
617
618 \begin{figure}
619 \centering
620 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{./figures/mdRP2.pdf}
621 \caption{The $P_2$ order parameters for head groups (circles) and
622 molecular bodies (squares) as a function of the ratio of head group
623 size ($\sigma_h$) to the width of the molecular bodies ($d$). \label{mdfig:rP2}}
624 \end{figure}
625
626 In addition to varying the size of the head groups, we studied the
627 effects of the interactions between head groups on the structure of
628 lipid bilayer by changing the strength of the dipoles. Figure
629 \ref{mdfig:sP2} shows how the $P_2$ order parameter changes with
630 increasing strength of the dipole. Generally, the dipoles on the head
631 groups become more ordered as the strength of the interaction between
632 heads is increased and become more disordered by decreasing the
633 interaction strength. When the interaction between the heads becomes
634 too weak, the bilayer structure does not persist; all lipid molecules
635 become dispersed in the solvent (which is non-polar in this
636 molecular-scale model). The critical value of the strength of the
637 dipole depends on the size of the head groups. The perfectly flat
638 surface becomes unstable below $5$ Debye, while the rippled
639 surfaces melt at $8$ Debye (asymmetric) or $10$ Debye (symmetric).
640
641 The ordering of the tails mirrors the ordering of the dipoles {\it
642 except for the flat phase}. Since the surface is nearly flat in this
643 phase, the order parameters are only weakly dependent on dipolar
644 strength until it reaches $15$ Debye. Once it reaches this value, the
645 head group interactions are strong enough to pull the head groups
646 close to each other and distort the bilayer structure. For a flat
647 surface, a substantial amount of free volume between the head groups
648 is normally available. When the head groups are brought closer by
649 dipolar interactions, the tails are forced to splay outward, first forming
650 curved bilayers, and then inverted micelles.
651
652 When $\sigma_h=1.28 d$, the $P_2$ order parameter decreases slightly
653 when the strength of the dipole is increased above $16$ Debye. For
654 rippled bilayers, there is less free volume available between the head
655 groups. Therefore increasing dipolar strength weakly influences the
656 structure of the membrane. However, the increase in the body $P_2$
657 order parameters implies that the membranes are being slightly
658 flattened due to the effects of increasing head-group attraction.
659
660 A very interesting behavior takes place when the head groups are very
661 large relative to the molecular bodies ($\sigma_h = 1.41 d$) and the
662 dipolar strength is relatively weak ($\mu < 9$ Debye). In this case,
663 the two leaves of the bilayer become totally interdigitated with each
664 other in large patches of the membrane. With higher dipolar
665 strength, the interdigitation is limited to single lines that run
666 through the bilayer in a direction perpendicular to the ripple wave
667 vector.
668
669 \begin{figure}
670 \centering
671 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{./figures/mdSP2.pdf}
672 \caption{The $P_2$ order parameters for head group dipoles (a) and
673 molecular bodies (b) as a function of the strength of the dipoles.
674 These order parameters are shown for four values of the head group /
675 molecular width ratio ($\sigma_h / d$). \label{mdfig:sP2}}
676 \end{figure}
677
678 Figure \ref{mdfig:tP2} shows the dependence of the order parameters on
679 temperature. As expected, systems are more ordered at low
680 temperatures, and more disordered at high temperatures. All of the
681 bilayers we studied can become unstable if the temperature becomes
682 high enough. The only interesting feature of the temperature
683 dependence is in the flat surfaces ($\sigma_h=1.20 d$ and
684 $\sigma_h=1.28 d$). Here, when the temperature is increased above
685 $310$K, there is enough jostling of the head groups to allow the
686 dipolar frustration to resolve into more ordered states. This results
687 in a slight increase in the $P_2$ order parameter above this
688 temperature.
689
690 For the rippled surfaces ($\sigma_h=1.35 d$ and $\sigma_h=1.41 d$),
691 there is a slightly increased orientational ordering in the molecular
692 bodies above $290$K. Since our model lacks the detailed information
693 about the behavior of the lipid tails, this is the closest the model
694 can come to depicting the ripple ($P_{\beta'}$) to fluid
695 ($L_{\alpha}$) phase transition. What we are observing is a
696 flattening of the rippled structures made possible by thermal
697 expansion of the tightly-packed head groups. The lack of detailed
698 chain configurations also makes it impossible for this model to depict
699 the ripple to gel ($L_{\beta'}$) phase transition.
700
701 \begin{figure}
702 \centering
703 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{./figures/mdTP2.pdf}
704 \caption{The $P_2$ order parameters for head group dipoles (a) and
705 molecular bodies (b) as a function of temperature.
706 These order parameters are shown for four values of the head group /
707 molecular width ratio ($\sigma_h / d$).\label{mdfig:tP2}}
708 \end{figure}
709
710 Fig. \ref{mdfig:phaseDiagram} shows a phase diagram for the model as a
711 function of the head group / molecular width ratio ($\sigma_h / d$)
712 and the strength of the head group dipole moment ($\mu$). Note that
713 the specific form of the bilayer phase is governed almost entirely by
714 the head group / molecular width ratio, while the strength of the
715 dipolar interactions between the head groups governs the stability of
716 the bilayer phase. Weaker dipoles result in unstable bilayer phases,
717 while extremely strong dipoles can shift the equilibrium to an
718 inverted micelle phase when the head groups are small. Temperature
719 has little effect on the actual bilayer phase observed, although higher
720 temperatures can cause the unstable region to grow into the higher
721 dipole region of this diagram.
722
723 \begin{figure}
724 \centering
725 \includegraphics[width=\linewidth]{./figures/mdPhaseDiagram.pdf}
726 \caption{Phase diagram for the simple molecular model as a function
727 of the head group / molecular width ratio ($\sigma_h / d$) and the
728 strength of the head group dipole moment
729 ($\mu$).\label{mdfig:phaseDiagram}}
730 \end{figure}
731
732 We have computed translational diffusion constants for lipid molecules
733 from the mean-square displacement,
734 \begin{equation}
735 D = \lim_{t \rightarrow \infty} \frac{1}{6 t} \langle {|\left({\bf r}_{i}(t) - {\bf r}_{i}(0) \right)|}^2 \rangle,
736 \end{equation}
737 of the lipid bodies. Translational diffusion constants for the
738 different head-to-tail size ratios (all at 300 K) are shown in table
739 \ref{mdtab:relaxation}. We have also computed orientational correlation
740 times for the head groups from fits of the second-order Legendre
741 polynomial correlation function,
742 \begin{equation}
743 C_{\ell}(t) = \langle P_{\ell}\left({\bf \mu}_{i}(t) \cdot {\bf
744 \mu}_{i}(0) \right) \rangle
745 \end{equation}
746 of the head group dipoles. The orientational correlation functions
747 appear to have multiple components in their decay: a fast ($12 \pm 2$
748 ps) decay due to librational motion of the head groups, as well as
749 moderate ($\tau^h_{\rm mid}$) and slow ($\tau^h_{\rm slow}$)
750 components. The fit values for the moderate and slow correlation
751 times are listed in table \ref{mdtab:relaxation}. Standard deviations
752 in the fit time constants are quite large (on the order of the values
753 themselves).
754
755 Sparrman and Westlund used a multi-relaxation model for NMR lineshapes
756 observed in gel, fluid, and ripple phases of DPPC and obtained
757 estimates of a correlation time for water translational diffusion
758 ($\tau_c$) of 20 ns.\cite{Sparrman2003} This correlation time
759 corresponds to water bound to small regions of the lipid membrane.
760 They further assume that the lipids can explore only a single period
761 of the ripple (essentially moving in a nearly one-dimensional path to
762 do so), and the correlation time can therefore be used to estimate a
763 value for the translational diffusion constant of $2.25 \times
764 10^{-11} m^2 s^{-1}$. The translational diffusion constants we obtain
765 are in reasonable agreement with this experimentally determined
766 value. However, the $T_2$ relaxation times obtained by Sparrman and
767 Westlund are consistent with P-N vector reorientation timescales of
768 2-5 ms. This is substantially slower than even the slowest component
769 we observe in the decay of our orientational correlation functions.
770 Other than the dipole-dipole interactions, our head groups have no
771 shape anisotropy which would force them to move as a unit with
772 neighboring molecules. This would naturally lead to P-N reorientation
773 times that are too fast when compared with experimental measurements.
774
775 \begin{table*}
776 \begin{minipage}{\linewidth}
777 \begin{center}
778 \caption{Fit values for the rotational correlation times for the head
779 groups ($\tau^h$) and molecular bodies ($\tau^b$) as well as the
780 translational diffusion constants for the molecule as a function of
781 the head-to-body width ratio. All correlation functions and transport
782 coefficients were computed from microcanonical simulations with an
783 average temperture of 300 K. In all of the phases, the head group
784 correlation functions decay with an fast librational contribution ($12
785 \pm 1$ ps). There are additional moderate ($\tau^h_{\rm mid}$) and
786 slow $\tau^h_{\rm slow}$ contributions to orientational decay that
787 depend strongly on the phase exhibited by the lipids. The symmetric
788 ripple phase ($\sigma_h / d = 1.35$) appears to exhibit the slowest
789 molecular reorientation.}
790 \begin{tabular}{lcccc}
791 \hline
792 $\sigma_h / d$ & $\tau^h_{\rm mid} (ns)$ & $\tau^h_{\rm
793 slow} (\mu s)$ & $\tau^b (\mu s)$ & $D (\times 10^{-11} m^2 s^{-1})$ \\
794 \hline
795 1.20 & $0.4$ & $9.6$ & $9.5$ & $0.43(1)$ \\
796 1.28 & $2.0$ & $13.5$ & $3.0$ & $5.91(3)$ \\
797 1.35 & $3.2$ & $4.0$ & $0.9$ & $3.42(1)$ \\
798 1.41 & $0.3$ & $23.8$ & $6.9$ & $7.16(1)$ \\
799 \end{tabular}
800 \label{mdtab:relaxation}
801 \end{center}
802 \end{minipage}
803 \end{table*}
804
805 \section{Discussion}
806 \label{mdsec:discussion}
807
808 Symmetric and asymmetric ripple phases have been observed to form in
809 our molecular dynamics simulations of a simple molecular-scale lipid
810 model. The lipid model consists of an dipolar head group and an
811 ellipsoidal tail. Within the limits of this model, an explanation for
812 generalized membrane curvature is a simple mismatch in the size of the
813 heads with the width of the molecular bodies. With heads
814 substantially larger than the bodies of the molecule, this curvature
815 should be convex nearly everywhere, a requirement which could be
816 resolved either with micellar or cylindrical phases.
817
818 The persistence of a {\it bilayer} structure therefore requires either
819 strong attractive forces between the head groups or exclusionary
820 forces from the solvent phase. To have a persistent bilayer structure
821 with the added requirement of convex membrane curvature appears to
822 result in corrugated structures like the ones pictured in
823 Fig. \ref{mdfig:phaseCartoon}. In each of the sections of these
824 corrugated phases, the local curvature near a most of the head groups
825 is convex. These structures are held together by the extremely strong
826 and directional interactions between the head groups.
827
828 The attractive forces holding the bilayer together could either be
829 non-directional (as in the work of Kranenburg and
830 Smit),\cite{Kranenburg2005} or directional (as we have utilized in
831 these simulations). The dipolar head groups are key for the
832 maintaining the bilayer structures exhibited by this particular model;
833 reducing the strength of the dipole has the tendency to make the
834 rippled phase disappear. The dipoles are likely to form attractive
835 head-to-tail configurations even in flat configurations, but the
836 temperatures are high enough that vortex defects become prevalent in
837 the flat phase. The flat phase we observed therefore appears to be
838 substantially above the Kosterlitz-Thouless transition temperature for
839 a planar system of dipoles with this set of parameters. For this
840 reason, it would be interesting to observe the thermal behavior of the
841 flat phase at substantially lower temperatures.
842
843 One feature of this model is that an energetically favorable
844 orientational ordering of the dipoles can be achieved by forming
845 ripples. The corrugation of the surface breaks the symmetry of the
846 plane, making vortex defects somewhat more expensive, and stabilizing
847 the long range orientational ordering for the dipoles in the head
848 groups. Most of the rows of the head-to-tail dipoles are parallel to
849 each other and the system adopts a bulk anti-ferroelectric state. We
850 believe that this is the first time the organization of the head
851 groups in ripple phases has been addressed.
852
853 Although the size-mismatch between the heads and molecular bodies
854 appears to be the primary driving force for surface convexity, the
855 persistence of the bilayer through the use of rippled structures is a
856 function of the strong, attractive interactions between the heads.
857 One important prediction we can make using the results from this
858 simple model is that if the dipole-dipole interaction is the leading
859 contributor to the head group attractions, the wave vectors for the
860 ripples should always be found {\it perpendicular} to the dipole
861 director axis. This echoes the prediction we made earlier for simple
862 elastic dipolar membranes, and may suggest experimental designs which
863 will test whether this is really the case in the phosphatidylcholine
864 $P_{\beta'}$ phases. The dipole director axis should also be easily
865 computable for the all-atom and coarse-grained simulations that have
866 been published in the literature.\cite{deVries05}
867
868 Experimental verification of our predictions of dipolar orientation
869 correlating with the ripple direction would require knowing both the
870 local orientation of a rippled region of the membrane (available via
871 AFM studies of supported bilayers) as well as the local ordering of
872 the membrane dipoles. Obtaining information about the local
873 orientations of the membrane dipoles may be available from
874 fluorescence detected linear dichroism (LD). Benninger {\it et al.}
875 have recently used axially-specific chromophores
876 2-(4,4-difluoro-5,7-dimethyl-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene-3-pentanoyl)-1-hexadecanoyl-sn-glycero-3-phospocholine
877 ($\beta$-BODIPY FL C5-HPC or BODIPY-PC) and 3,3'
878 dioctadecyloxacarbocyanine perchlorate (DiO) in their
879 fluorescence-detected linear dichroism (LD) studies of plasma
880 membranes of living cells.\cite{Benninger:2005qy} The DiO dye aligns
881 its transition moment perpendicular to the membrane normal, while the
882 BODIPY-PC transition dipole is parallel with the membrane normal.
883 Without a doubt, using fluorescence detection of linear dichroism in
884 concert with AFM surface scanning would be difficult experiments to
885 carry out. However, there is some hope of performing experiments to
886 either verify or falsify the predictions of our simulations.
887
888 Although our model is simple, it exhibits some rich and unexpected
889 behaviors. It would clearly be a closer approximation to reality if
890 we allowed bending motions between the dipoles and the molecular
891 bodies, and if we replaced the rigid ellipsoids with ball-and-chain
892 tails. However, the advantages of this simple model (large system
893 sizes, 50 fs time steps) allow us to rapidly explore the phase diagram
894 for a wide range of parameters. Our explanation of this rippling
895 phenomenon will help us design more accurate molecular models for
896 corrugated membranes and experiments to test whether or not
897 dipole-dipole interactions exert an influence on membrane rippling.