Ming-Tao Lee
National Central University
32 Papers
125 Citations
Ming-Tao Lee is an academic researcher from National Central University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Membrane & Lipid bilayer. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 28 publications.
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Papers
The condensing effect of cholesterol in lipid bilayers.
TL;DR: The condensing effect of cholesterol on phospholipid bilayers was systematically investigated for saturated and unsaturated chains, as a function of cholesterol concentration, using X-ray lamellar diffraction to measure the phosphate-to-phosphate distances.
421
Molecular mechanism of Peptide-induced pores in membranes.
TL;DR: A physical mechanism by which antimicrobial peptides spontaneously induce stable pores in membranes is suggested, which resembles a phase transition.
Process of inducing pores in membranes by melittin
TL;DR: Melittin bound on the vesicle translocated and redistributed to both sides of the membrane before the formation of stable pores, indicating that stable pores are formed only above a critical peptide-to-lipid ratio.
331
Evidence for membrane thinning effect as the mechanism for peptide-induced pore formation.
TL;DR: The full implications of the free energy were tested by including another type of peptide, melittin, that forms toroidal pores, instead of barrel-stave pores as in the case of alamethicin, indicating that the membrane thinning effect is a plausible mechanism for the peptide-induced pore formations.
301
Energetics of pore formation induced by membrane active peptides
TL;DR: This work uses two of the best-studied peptides, alamethicin and melittin, to represent peptides making two types of pores, that is, barrel-stave pores and toroidal pores, and extracts experimental parameters that are useful for further molecular analysis and for molecular dynamic simulation studies.