| Literature DB >> 27007455 |
In Soo Park1, Tae Joon Kwak2, Gyudo Lee3, Myeonggu Son1, Jeong Woo Choi1, Seungyeop Choi1, Kihwan Nam4, Sei-Young Lee1, Woo-Jin Chang2, Kilho Eom5, Dae Sung Yoon6, Sangyoup Lee4,7, Rashid Bashir8, Sang Woo Lee1.
Abstract
The direct quantification of weak intermolecular binding interactions is very important for many applications in biology and medicine. Techniques that can be used to investigate such interactions under a controlled environment, while varying different parameters such as loading rate, pulling direction, rupture event measurements, and the use of different functionalized probes, are still lacking. Herein, we demonstrate a biaxial dielectrophoresis force spectroscopy (BDFS) method that can be used to investigate weak unbinding events in a high-throughput manner under controlled environments and by varying the pulling direction (i.e., transverse and/or vertical axes) as well as the loading rate. With the BDFS system, we can quantitatively analyze binding interactions related to hydrogen bonding or ionic attractions between functionalized microbeads and a surface within a microfluidic device. Our BDFS system allowed for the characterization of the number of bonds involved in an interaction, bond affinity, kinetic rates, and energy barrier heights and widths from different regimes of the energy landscape.Entities:
Keywords: dielectrophoresis force spectroscopy; energy landscape; intermolecular weak binding interactions; microfluidic device; pulling direction
Year: 2016 PMID: 27007455 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5b05286
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881