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Modified atomic force microscope applied to the measurement of elastic modulus for a single peptide molecule
28
Citations
22
References
2001
Year
Afm TipMicroscopyPeptide EngineeringMolecular BiologySingle Peptide MoleculePeptide ScienceAnalytical UltracentrifugationMolecular DynamicsSingle Molecule BiophysicsBiophysicsMolecular MechanicMolecular ModelingBiomolecular EngineeringElastic ModulusNatural SciencesScanning Force MicroscopyMolecular BiophysicsPeptide MoleculeMedicine
A modified atomic force microscopy (AFM) system, based on a force modulation technique, has been used to find an approximate value for the elastic modulus of a single peptide molecule directly from a mechanical test. For this purpose a self-assembled monolayer built from two kinds of peptides, reactive (able to anchor to the AFM tip) and nonreactive, was synthesized. In a typical experiment a single C3K30C (C=cysteine, K=lysine) peptide molecule was stretched between a Au(111) substrate and the gold-coated tip of an AFM cantilever to which it was attached via gold–sulfur bonds. The amplitude of the cantilever oscillations, due to an external force applied via a magnetic particle to the cantilever, was recorded by a lock-in amplifier and recalculated into stiffness of the stretched molecule. A longitudinal Young’s modulus for the α-helix of a single peptide molecule and for the elongated state of this molecule has been estimated. The obtained values; 1.2±0.3 and 50±15 GPa, for the peptide α-helix and elongated peptide backbone, respectively, seem to be reasonable comparing them to the Young’s modulus of protein crystals and linear organic polymers. We believe this research opens up a means by which scientists can perform quantitative studies of the elastic properties of single molecule, especially of biologically important polymers like peptides or DNA.
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