Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry Freie Universität Berlin Arnimallee 22 14195 Berlin Germany
2. Faculty of Medicine and Health Technology Tampere University Arvo Ylpön katu 34 Tampere FI‐33520 Finland
3. Fimlab Laboratories Biokatu 4 Tampere FI‐33520 Finland
Abstract
AbstractSeveral techniques have been established to quantify the mechanicals of single molecules. However, most of them show only limited capabilities of parallelizing the measurement by performing many individual measurements simultaneously. Herein, a microfluidics‐based single‐molecule force spectroscopy method, which achieves sub‐nanometer spatial resolution and sub‐piconewton sensitivity and is capable of simultaneously quantifying hundreds of single‐molecule targets in parallel, is presented. It relies on a combination of total internal reflection microscopy and microfluidics, in which monodisperse fluorescent beads are immobilized on the bottom of a microfluidic channel by macromolecular linkers. Application of a flow generates a well‐defined shear force acting on the beads, whereas the nanomechanical linker response is quantified based on the force‐induced displacement of individual beads. To handle the high amount of data generated, a cluster analysis which is capable of a semi‐automatic identification of measurement artifacts and molecular populations is implemented. The method is validated by probing the mechanical response polyethylene glycol linkers and binding strength of biotin–NeutrAvidin complexes. Two energy barriers (at 3 and 5.7 Å, respectively) in the biotin–NeutrAvidin interaction are resolved and the unfolding behavior of talin's rod domain R3 in the force range between 1 to ≈10 pN is probed.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Academy of Finland
Subject
Biomaterials,Biotechnology,General Materials Science,General Chemistry
Cited by
1 articles.
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