A protocol to couple a large variety of single molecules covalently onto an AFM tip is presented. Procedures and examples to determine the adhesion force and free energy of these molecules on solid supports and bio-interfaces are provided.
Atomic force spectroscopy is an ideal tool to study molecules at surfaces and interfaces. An experimental protocol to couple a large variety of single molecules covalently onto an AFM tip is presented. At the same time the AFM tip is passivated to prevent unspecific interactions between the tip and the substrate, which is a prerequisite to study single molecules attached to the AFM tip. Analyses to determine the adhesion force, the adhesion length, and the free energy of these molecules on solid surfaces and bio-interfaces are shortly presented and external references for further reading are provided. Example molecules are the poly(amino acid) polytyrosine, the graft polymer PI-g-PS and the phospholipid POPE (1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine). These molecules are desorbed from different surfaces like CH3-SAMs, hydrogen terminated diamond and supported lipid bilayers under various solvent conditions. Finally, the advantages of force spectroscopic single molecule experiments are discussed including means to decide if truly a single molecule has been studied in the experiment.
Over the past 30 years, atomic force microscopy (AFM) has turned out to be a valuable imaging technique to study biological 1,2 and synthetic 3 materials and surfaces since it provides molecular spatial resolution in all three dimensions and can be operated in various solvent environments. In addition, AFM-single molecule force spectroscopy (SMFS) enables to measure forces ranging from the pN to µN regime and has given unprecedented insight for example into protein folding 4,5, polymer physics 6–8 , and single molecule-surface interaction9–12.The rationale behind studying single molecules rather than an ensemble of molecules is to avoid averaging effects which often mask rare events or hidden molecular states. Furthermore, a multitude of molecular parameters such as the contour length, the Kuhn length, the adhesion free energy, etc. can be obtained. This is detailed in the examples below. In a typical AFM-SMFS experiment, the probe molecule is coupled to a very sharp tip via a linker molecule. The tip itself is located at the end of a bendable cantilever. If the tip is brought into contact with the surface the probe molecule will interact with this surface. By observing the deflection of the cantilever upon retraction of the tip, the force, and hence the free energy, to detach the molecule from the surface can be determined. To obtain meaningful statistics, a large number of so called force-distance curves have to be acquired. Furthermore, to have true single molecule experiments (i.e., using one and the same probe molecule over the duration of the whole experiment) the probe molecule should be coupled covalently to the AFM tip. Here, an experimental protocol for cantilever functionalization with a single molecule via a covalent bond is presented. The single molecule can either be coupled via an amino or a thiol group to the AFM tip. The conjugation process can be performed in a broad variety of solvents (organic and aqueous) to account for the solvation properties of the polymers used.
In the first part, a general protocol to covalently attach a single molecule (“probe molecule”) via a linker molecule to an AFM tip is described. To this end, organic NHS- or maleimide-chemistry is used13. Along with the protocol for three example molecules, the data acquisition and data analysis processes are described and references for further reading are provided. The example molecules are: the (linear) polymer tyrosine, the graft polymer PI-g-PS and the lipid POPE. This includes slight variations of the protocol, for example to covalently attach cysteines. In addition, a section is dedicated to the preparation of different surfaces such as a diamond surface, a CH3-self-assembled monolayer and lipid bilayers. These interfaces have proven to be good references and examples.
NOTE: See Figure 2 for an overview of the process flow comprising the preparation, the data acquisition and data analysis steps.
1. Reagent Setup
NOTE: All chemicals must be handled with care, and thus a lab coat, gloves and eye protection should be used. All operations must be performed in a laboratory hood. In particular, special gloves should be worn in case of chloroform use.
2. Equipment Setup
NOTE: To avoid possible cross-contamination, use fresh and clean vessels for each step.
3. Tip Functionalization
NOTE: Use tweezers, vessels, etc. made from stainless steel, PTFE, glass or any other material which is chemically stable in organic solutions if applicable. Unless specified otherwise, carry out all steps at RT. The amount of incubation solution needed depends on the number of cantilever chips. Make sure that the cantilevers are immersed in the respective solutions at all time.
NOTE: Use a hood to avoid inhalation of organic vapors.
Figure 1. (A) Schematic showing the tip functionalization process using the example of NHS chemistry. (B) Chemical bonding employed to attach a probe molecule to the tip via an amino group. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
4. Surface Preparation
5. Data Acquisition
NOTE: For the experiments, use an AFM, which provides the capability to measure in liquids. The data acquisition and data analysis procedures are applicable regardless of the AFM model used. Furthermore, in some experiments it is advantageous to have the possibility to control the temperature within the liquid cell. Cantilever deflection was detected via the laser beam deflection method 19. Spring constants were determined with the thermal noise method 20.
6. Data Preparation
NOTE: In this section general data preparation steps which are typically carried out independent of the specific type of experiment to convert units to newton and nanometer as well as to correct the data are described. The experiment specific data analyses are briefly described further below in the respective representative example section.
Figure 2. Process flow diagram showing the sample preparation, the data acquisition and the data analysis. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
In the following, the results for the above described example molecules, namely the polymers poly(amino acid) polytyrosine, the graft polymer PI-g-PS and the phospholipid POPE, are presented. First for each example, experiment specific details for the data acquisition and data preparation are provided. Then, the exemplary results for experiments where these molecules were desorbed from different surfaces (CH3-SAMs, hydrogen terminated diamond and lipid bilayers) are shown. Determination of the adhesion force, the adhesion length and the free energy are introduced.
Example 1: Desorption of polytyrosine from self-assembled monolayer
The desorption of polytyrosine from a hydrophobic SAM in different solutions with a varying content of ethanol was measured. In each solution the cantilever InvOLS and spring constants were determined as described above and at least 300 force distance traces were recorded for each solution. All experiments of one experimental set were done with a single cantilever on a single day to ensure that one and the same single poly(amino acid) was measured. The extension/retraction velocity of the cantilever was 0.5 µm/sec and the dwell time on the surface was 1 sec. The force distance traces showed plateaus of constant force. Each plateau was fitted with a sigmoidal curve and the plateau force as well as the plateau length were determined and plotted in a histogram. The histograms were fitted with a Gaussian and the peak value as well as the standard variation (error) of the distribution was extracted. Until the very end of the force plateau, the system is in equilibrium and the area underneath the plateau therefore equals the free energy per polymer length. Only the detachment process itself at the end of the plateau is in non-equilibrium. Because of this, for typical experiments the plateau length is longer than the equilibrium length (about 30%) and the area underneath the sigmoidal fits an upper estimate for the adhesion free energy 21.
Figure 3. (A) Force distance trace (retraction) of polytyrosine on a methyl-SAM in pure water (shown in red). Only a single molecule desorbs as can be seen in the single step drop of the force to the baseline (zero force). The sigmoidal fit is shown in black and the extracted plateau length and plateau force are indicated by arrows. (B) Histograms of the extracted plateau force for measurements in pure water and in water/ethanol mixtures with different molar ethanol content. (C) Plateau length histograms of the same experimental set. (D) Peak plateau length vs. peak plateau force.” Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3A shows a single force-distance trace of polytyrosine measured in pure water. Plateau force and plateau length are extracted. If there is only one molecule on the tip that is desorbed from the SAM, the plateau length histogram shows a narrow and monomodal distribution (typically in experiments the standard deviation in a gauss fit of the length histogram is around 5–20 nm). Vice versa, if there’s only one narrow peak in the plateau length histogram, one can be relatively sure that the whole experimental set was done with one and the same polymer. The reason for this is that the polytyrosines are highly polydispersive in size (50 to 100 kDa). Therefore, two polymers of exactly the same length are highly improbable. Adding ethanol weakens the hydrophobic interaction between polytyrosine and the surface 10,22 and leads to a lower adsorption free energy and thus to a lower plateau force as can be seen in the plateau force histograms for the different solvent conditions shown in Figure 3B. Now it can be investigated how the plateau length of a single polytyrosine changes for different adsorption free energies. As can be seen in Figure 3C the plateau length decreases with the addition of ethanol. At the same time the plateau force decreases (Figure 3D).
In order to obtain all relevant parameters of the desorption process namely the contour length, the Kuhn length, the adsorption free energy and the intrinsic monomeric desorption rate, one has to combine the above described measurements with constant distance experiments. For details see 21.
Example 2: Desorption of the graft polymer PI-g-PS from a hydrophobic diamond
In Figure 4A and 4B typical force-distance curves obtained with PI-g-PS on hydrogenated diamond in water at RT are shown. The dwell time on the surface was 1 sec and the velocity of the cantilever was 1 µm/sec. Either plateaus of constant force (Figure 4A) or rupture events were observed (Figure 4B). For the plateaus of constant force, the height of the plateaus was determined with a sigmoidal fit and the values were plotted in a histogram (Figure 4C). To exclude the unspecific adhesion peak caused by direct interaction of the tip with the surface (first peak in the force-distance curve in Figure 4B), the maximal force in some distance from the surface was determined. The obtained values for these rupture events were then plotted in a histogram (Figure 4D). For further analysis the histograms were fitted with a Gaussian and the maximal height was chosen as an average value for the data point. With this kind of experiment the influence of the presence of side chains and their architecture was investigated 14.
Figure 4. Force-distance retraction curves performed with a linear polyisoprene backbone grafted with polystyrene side chains (PI-g-PS). Either plateaus of constant force (A) or rupture events (B) are observed. For plateaus of constant force, the height of the plateaus is determined with a sigmoidal fit and plotted in a histogram (C) whereas for rupture events, the maximal rupture force is determined (D). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Example 3: Extraction of a single phospholipid (POPE) from a lipid bilayer
Figure 5A shows a schematic representation of the single molecule extraction process. Extraction measurements were performed by vertically approaching the POPE-functionalized AFM tip towards the supported lipid bilayer (not shown). Upon contact of the tip with the POPC bilayer, a small force (~100 pN) is kept constant by a feedback loop for about 4 sec. If the POPE molecule inserts into the bilayer during this dwell time, it is pulled out or ‘extracted’ from the bilayer upon retracting the AFM tip from the bilayer. This results in characteristic force-distance curves. Their shape is basically determined by the stretching elasticity of the PEG linker and can be fitted by a wormlike chain (WLC) model 23. A superposition of more than 50 curves is shown in Figure 5B. True single molecule events can be recognized by single peaked force histograms (Figure 5C). Note that in order to gain further insight into the size of certain molecular parameter (e.g., the mean life time of lipids in bilayers), it is necessary to carry out measurements with different force loading rates. For further analysis of single lipid extraction experiments see 24.
Figure 5. (A) Schematic for the extraction of a single molecule from a lipid bilayer. Note that the lipid molecule is covalently coupled to the tip. Therefore, many hundred or even thousands of force-extraction cycles can be carried out with one and the same molecule. (B) Superposition of more than 50 extraction curves 9. (C) Histogram of the extraction force distribution of the example shown in (B). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Step | Purpose | Solute | Solvent | Typical ratio or concentration |
Silanization | Create amino groups on cantilever surface | APTES (3-Aminopropyl) tri-ethoxysilane (e.g., Vectabond™) | dry acetone | 1:50 (v/v) – 1:100 (v/v) |
PEGylation | Provide cantilever surface with amino or thiol reactive groups | NHS-PEG-NHS or Mal-PEG-NHS | dry chloroform | 0.25–25 mM |
PEGylation | Passivate cantilever surface | methyl-PEG-NHS | dry chloroform | 25 mM |
Conjugation of probe molecule | Couple probe molecule via an amino or thiol group to bi-functional PEG | probe molecule (polymer, lipid, etc.) | dry chloroform or borate buffer | 0.1–10 mM |
Table 1. Solutions needed for the tip functionalization.
During the last decades, single molecule experiments have provided unprecedented insights into molecular mechanisms and turned out to be an invaluable approach in life science and beyond. To achieve good and meaningful statistics from SMFS experiments, ideally one and the same molecule is used over the whole course of the experiment. In contrast to experiments with ensembles of molecules, SMFS experiments are able to detect rare events and hidden molecular states. Another advantage of single molecule experiments is that they can be modeled by means of molecular dynamics simulations 24,25.
The cantilever functionalization protocol described above is a modified version of procedures published previously 26–28. After activation and silanization, the AFM cantilever is functionalized with a mixture of two different types of polyethylene-glycol (PEG) molecules (linker molecules).
The first linker-PEG is terminated by an inert methyl group (“methyl-PEG”) and the second by an amino-reactive N-hydroxysuccinimide( NHS) group (or a thiol reactive maleimide group), where later on the probe molecule is conjugated (“NHS-PEG”, “Mal-PEG”). See Figure 1 for a schematic of the tip functionalization. The purpose of the PEG is threefold: First, it passivates the tip surface and therefore prevents unspecific adsorption. Second, using a certain methyl-PEG/NHS-PEG ratio allows for adjusting the NHS-PEG concentration on the tip surface. And third, it separates the tip from the probe molecule and therefore allows for quantification of the molecule-surface interaction without interference from the direct tip-surface interaction. Then the probe molecule is covalently coupled to the tip via the NHS-PEG (or Mal-PEG).
This protocol makes sure that all bonds (*) in the “coupling chain” tip*OH*silane*PEG*probe molecule are covalent bonds and therefore very strong. This in turn, allows that one and the same probe molecule is measured over the entire duration of the experiment. This has been exemplified above in the representative results section showing true single molecule force spectroscopy.
How can be verified that truly a single molecule is measured? For single traces with plateaus of constant force, a single drop to the baseline is sufficient. If more than one polymer is desorbed at the same time, the force drops to zero in several discrete steps, as each polymer detaches at a different point. More difficult is to decide if it is each time the same single molecule. Therefore the distribution of detachment lengths has to be evaluated. A narrow distribution with a single peak is a good indication that one and the same single molecule was probed in every force-extension trace. For single traces with rupture events, the superposition of all traces is the best method to decide if (one and the same) single molecule was measured. Alternatively, each trace can be fitted with a (WLC) model and then both the persistence length and the rupture lengths at a defined force can be plotted. The distribution of these two parameters has to be narrow and single peaked.
In conclusion, a preparation procedure for the attachment of a large variety of single molecules to AFM tips has been presented. The AFM’s small tip (radius ~ 10 nm), its lateral positioning capabilities and its force sensitivity make it the ideal tool to study the adhesion properties of single molecules on biological and non-biological surfaces in almost any liquid.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
The authors thank the DFG (Hu 997/2-2) for financial support. FS acknowledges the Hanns-Seidel-Stiftung (HSS). SKr was supported by the Elitenetzwerk Bayern in the framework of the doctorate program Material Science of Complex Interfaces. SKi thanks the SFB 863 for financial support.
Materials | |||
Hellmanex III alkaline liquid concentrate (detergent solution) | Hellma | ||
RCA (ultrapure water, hydrogen peroxide (35 %), ammonia (32%); 5:1:1(v/v/v)) | Sigma | ||
Vectabond reagent / APTES (3-Aminopropyl)triethoxysilane | Vectorlabs | ||
Dry acetone (< 50 ppm H2O) | Sigma | ||
Dry chloroform (> 99.9 %) | Sigma | ||
Triethylamine | Sigma | ||
Ultrapure water | Biochrom, Germany | ||
Di-sodium tetraborate (> 99.5 %) | Biochrom, Germany | ||
Boric Acid | Biochrom, Germany | ||
Monofunctional α-methoxy-ω-NHS PEG, 5kDa, “methyl-PEG-NHS” | Rapp, Germany | ||
Heterobifunctional α,ω-bis-NHS PEG, 6 kDa, “NHS-PEG-NHS” | Rapp, Germany | ||
Heterobifunctional α-maleimidohexanoic- ω-NHS PEG, 5 kDa, “Mal-PEG-NHS” | Rapp, Germany | ||
Probe molecule (polymer, lipid, etc.) | |||
Equipment | |||
Sufficient amount of glass crystallising dishes with spout (10 ml), glass petri dishes (500 µl) and glass lids | VWR International GmbH, Germany | ||
Laboratory oven model UF30 | Memmert, Germany | ||
Temperature controlled sonicator | VWR International GmbH, Germany | ||
Plasma system "Femto", 100 W | Diener, Germany | ||
One separate glass syringe for each organic solvent | VWR International GmbH, Germany | ||
Vortex mixer | VWR International GmbH, Germany | ||
Microcentrifuge tubes (0.5 ml or 1.5 ml) | Eppendorf | ||
Pipettes: 10-100 µl, 50-200 µl and 100-1000 µl | Eppendorf | ||
AFM with temperature controlled fluid cell (e.g. MFP-3D with BioHeater) | Asylulm Research, Santa Barbara | ||
Soft SiN cantilevers cantilever, typically made from silicon nitride (SiN) (spring constant less than 100 pN/nm, e.g. MLCT) | Bruker AXS, Santa Barbara |