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TEMPE, Ariz. A team of researchers have developed
a method that could vastly improve the ability of atomic force
microscopes to "see" the chemical composition of a sample, follow
variations of the sample, as well as map its topographic structure.
The advance could have significant implications for
drug development by allowing scientists to monitor the effects of
potential drugs on an ever-smaller scale, according to Stuart Lindsay,
director of the Center for Single Molecule Biophysics at the Biodesign
Institute at Arizona State University and a lead researcher on the
project.
Lindsay, an ASU professor in the department of
physics and astronomy said the new technique allows an atomic force
microscope to "see," on a nanometer scale, the chemical composition of
molecules.
"Atomic force microscopy has a resolution down to
an atomic level, but until now it has been blind to identifying
specific chemical compositions," Lindsay said.
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An artist's depiction shows an atomic force
microscope probe (not to scale) 'fishing' for molecular sites
recognized by an antibody tethered to the probe by a fine polymer
thread. The new technique promises to vastly improve the
capabilities of atomic force microscopy. |
The researchers -- Lindsay, Hongda Wang, Ralph Bash,
Brian Ashcroft, and Dennis Lohr of Arizona State University; Cordula
Stroh, Hermann Gruber and Peter Hinterdorfer of the Institute of
Biophysics at the University of Lintz, Austria; and Jeremy Nelson of
Molecular Imaging Corporation, Tempe, Ariz. -- present their findings
in "Single Molecule Recognition Imaging Microscopy" in the current
issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The
article is available on line at
http://www4.nationalacademies.org/nas/nashome.nsf
"If you imagine that all proteins are shaped like
Lego blocks, then conventional atomic force microscopy (AFM) is
feeling the Lego blocks on the floor, but it can't tell the difference
between one block and another," Lindsay explained. "What we have done,
is allow the person sitting on the floor and feeling those blocks to
open their eyes and see that there are red Lego blocks, green Lego
blocks and yellow Lego blocks."
"This allows you to identify specific components in
an image," he added. "It means you can now follow a complex process
and see what's happening, at the molecular level, to one of the
components. We are now giving AFM chemical sensitivity in much the way
colored dyes gave optical microscopes optical sensitivity for much
larger objects (~1 micron)."
Atomic force microscopes provide images on the
nanometer scale by using a highly sensitive and tiny probe that is
essentially pulled across a surface. By doing this, researchers can
obtain topographical images down to a nanometer scale.
To use the AFM in its new mode, the researchers
attached antibodies keyed to individual proteins to the tip of an
AFM's probe. When an antibody reacts with the protein it is
specifically targeted for, it creates a variance in the microscope's
reading compared to a reading with a bare tip, thus showing the
presence of a protein or other specific material in the region being
scanned.
To help ensure that the antibody tipped probe is
truly sensitive, a strand of polymer connects the antibody to the tip,
providing a tether that allows the antibody to wiggle into position to
better connect with the protein receptors. A magnetically excited
cantilever makes the tip oscillate up and down to make the antibody
disconnect and reconnect and keep the probe moving.
A key capability of this technique, Lindsay said,
is that it allows researchers to see how components of a cell react on
a molecular scale when they experience biological processes, such as
their response to a specific chemical or compound. In this mode, it
could provide researchers with a molecular "time-lapsed movie" of such
reactions, which could lead to greater understanding of the chemical
dynamics involved in how cells react to such stimuli.
Lindsay said the new AFM method could be
significant for drug discovery.
"This development opens up the AFM as a research
tool," Lindsay added. "The ability to identify the specific proteins
on a membrane surface means you can take something very complex, like
the surface of a human cell with all of the types of different
receptors on it and ask questions about the local chemistry, like what
is binding at those sites. That will provide the fundamental knowledge
you need to develop new drugs." |