2008 APS March Meeting
Volume 53, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 10–14, 2008;
New Orleans, Louisiana
Session P14: High-Bandwidth Dynamic Atomic Force Microscopy
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Morial Convention Center
Room: 205
Sponsoring
Units:
DBP BPS FIAP
Chair: Brian Salzberg, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
Abstract ID: BAPS.2008.MAR.P14.5
Abstract: P14.00005 : High-speed AFM for Studying Dynamic Biomolecular Processes*
10:24 AM–11:00 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Toshio Ando
(Kanazawa University)
Biological molecules show their vital activities only in aqueous solutions.
It had been one of dreams in biological sciences to directly observe
biological macromolecules (protein, DNA) at work under a physiological
condition because such observation is straightforward to understanding their
dynamic behaviors and functional mechanisms. Optical microscopy has no
sufficient spatial resolution and electron microscopy is not applicable to
in-liquid samples. Atomic force microscopy (AFM) can visualize molecules in
liquids at high resolution but its imaging rate was too low to capture
dynamic biological processes. This slow imaging rate is because AFM employs
mechanical probes (cantilevers) and mechanical scanners to detect the sample
height at each pixel. It is quite difficult to quickly move a mechanical
device of macroscopic size with sub-nanometer accuracy without producing
unwanted vibrations. It is also difficult to maintain the delicate contact
between a probe tip and fragile samples. Two key techniques are required to
realize high-speed AFM for biological research; fast feedback control to
maintain a weak tip-sample interaction force and a technique to suppress
mechanical vibrations of the scanner. Various efforts have been carried out
in the past decade to materialize high-speed AFM. The current high-speed AFM
can capture images on video at 30-60 frames/s for a scan range of 250nm and
100 scan lines, without significantly disturbing week biomolecular
interaction. Our recent studies demonstrated that this new microscope can
reveal biomolecular processes such as myosin V walking along actin tracks
and association/dissociation dynamics of chaperonin GroEL-GroES that occurs
in a negatively cooperative manner. The capacity of nanometer-scale
visualization of dynamic processes in liquids will innovate on biological
research. In addition, it will open a new way to study dynamic
chemical/physical processes of various phenomena that occur at the
liquid-solid interfaces.
*This work was supported by CREST/JST.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2008.MAR.P14.5