
Sarah L. Keller
· ProfessorVerifiedUniversity of Washington · Chemistry
Active 1993–2026
About
Sarah L. Keller is a biophysicist and the Duane and Barbara LaViolette Endowed Professor of Chemistry at the University of Washington. She investigates self-assembling soft condensed matter systems, with a primary research focus on how lipid mixtures within bilayer membranes give rise to complex phase behavior and how this behavior manifests in biological membranes. Keller earned her Ph.D. in Physics from Princeton University in 1995 and completed postdoctoral research as a Presidential Fellow at UC Santa Barbara and as an NIH NRSA Fellow at Stanford University. Her work has significantly contributed to understanding membrane organization and phase separation, which are fundamental to cellular function.
Research topics
- Biochemistry
- Chemistry
- Biology
- Biophysics
- Organic chemistry
- Engineering
- Physics
- Cell biology
- Biomedical engineering
- Optics
- Nuclear magnetic resonance
- Materials science
- Nanotechnology
Selected publications
Biophysical Journal · 2026-02-01
articleSenior authorBPS2026 – Wrinkling in sheets with nonuniform growth and bending rigidity
Biophysical Journal · 2026-02-01
articleSenior authorWrinkling in Sheets with Nonuniform Growth and Bending Rigidity
ArXiv.org · 2025-11-14
preprintOpen accessSenior authorThin elastic sheets bend easily, leading to mechanical instabilities such as wrinkling. Here, we investigate wrinkles at edges of bi-strips, which consist of two thin sheets, one that swells and one that does not, joined side-by-side. It is well known that when bending rigidity is uniform across an isolated bi-strip, swelling results in axisymmetric shapes like a wine bottle: two cylinders of different radii are joined by a smooth transition zone. However, when the bending rigidity of the swollen sheet differs from that of the non-swollen sheet, purely axisymmetric shapes are no longer energetically favorable, and wrinkles arise. When the bending rigidity of the non-swollen sheet is essentially infinite, the wrinkles coarsen with distance from the transition zone such that dimensionless wavelengths and widths are related by $\tildeλ \propto \tilde{w}^{2/3}$. If the bending rigidity of the non-swollen sheet is non-infinite (but~still significantly larger than that of the swollen sheet), then the non-swollen sheet assumes a non-infinite radius of curvature, $R_0$. We find that the wrinkles in this system extend a critical distance, $w_C$, beyond the junction of the two strips and that $w_C \propto R_0$. Local undulations of wrinkles are favorable in this system because they decrease the overall bending energy by allowing the non-swollen sheet to have a larger radius of curvature than would otherwise be dictated by its reference geometry. Our results are relevant to a wide range of sheets that experience non-uniform growth, whether in natural systems such as plants or in synthetic systems such as designed, responsive materials.
BPS2025 - Impact of replicative age on liquid-liquid phase separation in the yeast vacuole membrane
Biophysical Journal · 2025-02-01
articleSenior authorMicron-scale, liquid-liquid phase separation in ternary lipid membranes containing DPPE
Biophysical Journal · 2025-09-13
articleOpen accessSenior authorBiophysical Journal · 2025-02-01
articleSenior authorSeveral common methods of making vesicles (except an emulsion method) capture intended lipid ratios
Biophysical Journal · 2025-04-05 · 1 citations
erratumSenior authorMicron-scale, liquid-liquid phase separation in ternary lipid membranes containing DPPE
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) · 2025-05-09 · 1 citations
preprintOpen accessSenior authorCorrespondingMicron-scale, liquid-liquid phase separation occurs in membranes of living cells, with physiological consequences. To discover which lipids might support phase separation in cell membranes and how lipids might partition between phases, miscibility phase diagrams have been mapped for model membranes. Typically, model membranes are composed of ternary mixtures of a lipid with a high melting temperature, a lipid with a low melting temperature, and cholesterol. Phospholipids in ternary mixtures are chosen primarily to favor stable membranes (phosphatidylcholines and sphingomyelins) or add charge (phosphatidylglycerols and phosphatidylserines). A major class of phospholipids missing from experimental ternary diagrams has been the phosphatidylethanolamines (PEs). PE-lipids constitute up to 20 mol% of common biological membranes, where they influence protein function and facilitate membrane fusion. These biological effects are often attributed to PE's smaller headgroup, which leads to higher monolayer spontaneous curvatures and higher melting temperatures. Taken alone, the higher melting points of saturated PE-lipids imply that liquid-liquid phase separation should persist to higher temperatures in membranes containing PE-lipids. Here, we tested that hypothesis by substituting a saturated PE-lipid (DPPE) for its corresponding PC-lipid (DPPC) in two well-studied ternary membranes (DOPC/DPPC/cholesterol and DiphyPC/DPPC/cholesterol). We used fluorescence microscopy to map full ternary phase diagrams for giant vesicles over a range of temperatures. Surprisingly, we found no micron-scale, liquid-liquid phase separation in vesicles of the first mixture (DOPC/DPPE/cholesterol), and only a small region of liquid-liquid phase separation in the second mixture (DiphyPC/DPPE/cholesterol). Instead, coexisting solid and liquid phases were widespread, with the solid phase enriched in DPPE. An unusual feature of these ternary membranes is that solid and liquid-ordered phases can be distinguished by fluorescence microscopy, so tie-line directions can be estimated throughout the phase diagram, and transition temperatures to the 3-phase region (containing a liquid-disordered phase, a liquid-ordered phase, and a solid phase) can be accurately measured.
BPS2025 - Mapping phase diagrams for ternary vesicle compositions with PE lipids
Biophysical Journal · 2025-02-01
articleSenior authorJournal of Case Reports and Images in Obstetrics and Gynecology · 2024-05-28
articleOpen accessIntroduction: Ovarian torsion is a known risk of ovarian hyperstimulation done as part of fertility treatments. The purpose of this case report is to describe an unusual case of recurrent ovarian torsion following oocyte cryopreservation that was ultimately managed with ovarian detorsion and dual technique oophoropexy. Case Report: The patient presented is a 25-yearold female with history of recurrent ovarian torsion who underwent fertility preservation with ovarian cryopreservation in the setting of risk for ovarian loss in the case of recurrent torsion episodes. Following ovarian hyperstimulation and oocyte retrieval, the patient experienced three recurrent episodes of torsion which were surgically managed. On the third episode, a dual technique oophoropexy was performed using both utero-ovarian ligament plication and ovarian fixation. Conclusion: This case describes an unusual presentation of an uncommon complication of ovarian stimulation. During her surgical management of recurrent ovarian torsion, ovarian conservation was prioritized and a dual oophoropexy technique was utilized which has thus far prevented further recurrent episodes of torsion.
Recent grants
CAREER: Lateral Phase Separation of Rafts and Liquid Domains in Lipid Systems
NSF · $657k · 2002–2008
NSF · $900k · 2019–2025
NSF · $1.2M · 2023–2027
NSF · $1.3M · 2014–2021
NSF · $852k · 2008–2015
Frequent coauthors
- 34 shared
Caitlin E. Cornell
University of California, Berkeley
- 21 shared
Aurelia R. Honerkamp‐Smith
Lehigh University
- 19 shared
Sarah L. Veatch
University of Michigan–Ann Arbor
- 17 shared
Roy A. Black
University of Washington
- 17 shared
Matthew C. Blosser
University of Southern California
- 14 shared
Alexey J. Merz
University of Washington
- 13 shared
Valerie S. Ratts
- 13 shared
Zachary R. Cohen
University of Washington
Labs
Keller LabPI
Education
Ph.D., Physics
Princeton University
Other
UC Santa Barbara
Other
Stanford University
Awards & honors
- AWIS Award for Science Advancement and Leadership, 2025
- Fellow of the Biophysical Society, 2021
- Honorable Mention – UW Distinguished Graduate Mentor Award,…
- Cottrell STAR Award, 2019
- Avanti Award (renamed the Agnes Pockels Award), Biophysical…
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