Reverse Engineering of an Affinity-Switchable Molecular Interaction Characterized by Atomic Force Microscopy Single-Molecule Force Spectroscopy

Tunable and switchable interaction between molecules is a key for regulation and control of cellular processes. The translation of the underlying physicochemical principles to synthetic and switchable functional entities and molecules that can mimic the corresponding molecular functions is called re...

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Veröffentlicht in:Langmuir 2008-02, Vol.24 (4), p.1365-1370
Hauptverfasser: Anselmetti, Dario, Bartels, Frank Wilco, Becker, Anke, Decker, Björn, Eckel, Rainer, McIntosh, Matthew, Mattay, Jochen, Plattner, Patrik, Ros, Robert, Schäfer, Christian, Sewald, Norbert
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Tunable and switchable interaction between molecules is a key for regulation and control of cellular processes. The translation of the underlying physicochemical principles to synthetic and switchable functional entities and molecules that can mimic the corresponding molecular functions is called reverse molecular engineering. We quantitatively investigated autoinducer-regulated DNA−protein interaction in bacterial gene regulation processes with single atomic force microscopy (AFM) molecule force spectroscopy in vitro, and developed an artificial bistable molecular host−guest system that can be controlled and regulated by external signals (UV light exposure and thermal energy). The intermolecular binding functionality (affinity) and its reproducible and reversible switching has been proven by AFM force spectroscopy at the single-molecule level. This affinity-tunable optomechanical switch will allow novel applications with respect to molecular manipulation, nanoscale rewritable molecular memories, and/or artificial ion channels, which will serve for the controlled transport and release of ions and neutral compounds in the future.
ISSN:0743-7463
1520-5827
DOI:10.1021/la702373b