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1.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 2196, 2021 01 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33500438

RESUMO

In a high-speed single-molecule experiment with a force probe, a protein is tethered between two substrates that are manipulated to exert force on the system. To avoid nonspecific interactions between the protein and nearby substrates, the protein is usually attached to the substrates through long, flexible linkers. This approach precludes measurements of mechanical properties with high spatial and temporal resolution, for rapidly exerted forces are dissipated into the linkers. Because mammalian hearing operates at frequencies reaching tens to hundreds of kilohertz, the mechanical processes that occur during transduction are of very short duration. Single-molecule experiments on the relevant proteins therefore cannot involve long tethers. We previously characterized the mechanical properties of protocadherin 15 (PCDH15), a protein essential for human hearing, by tethering an individual monomer through very short linkers between a probe bead held in an optical trap and a pedestal bead immobilized on a glass coverslip. Because the two confining surfaces were separated by only the length of the tethered protein, hydrodynamic coupling between those surfaces complicated the interpretation of the data. To facilitate our experiments, we characterize here the anisotropic and position-dependent diffusion coefficient of a probe in the presence of an effectively infinite wall, the coverslip, and of the immobile pedestal.


Assuntos
Imagem Individual de Molécula , Difusão , Pinças Ópticas , Espalhamento de Radiação , Temperatura
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 116(22): 11048-11056, 2019 05 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31072932

RESUMO

Hair cells, the sensory receptors of the inner ear, respond to mechanical forces originating from sounds and accelerations. An essential feature of each hair cell is an array of filamentous tip links, consisting of the proteins protocadherin 15 (PCDH15) and cadherin 23 (CDH23), whose tension is thought to directly gate the cell's transduction channels. These links are considered far too stiff to represent the gating springs that convert hair bundle displacement into forces capable of opening the channels, and no mechanism has been suggested through which tip-link stiffness could be varied to accommodate hair cells of distinct frequency sensitivity in different receptor organs and animals. Consequently, the gating spring's identity and mechanism of operation remain central questions in sensory neuroscience. Using a high-precision optical trap, we show that an individual monomer of PCDH15 acts as an entropic spring that is much softer than its enthalpic stiffness alone would suggest. This low stiffness implies that the protein is a significant part of the gating spring that controls a hair cell's transduction channels. The tip link's entropic nature then allows for stiffness control through modulation of its tension. We find that a PCDH15 molecule is unstable under tension and exhibits a rich variety of reversible unfolding events that are augmented when the Ca2+ concentration is reduced to physiological levels. Therefore, tip link tension and Ca2+ concentration are likely parameters through which nature tunes a gating spring's mechanical properties.


Assuntos
Caderinas/química , Caderinas/metabolismo , Elasticidade/fisiologia , Células Ciliadas Auditivas/fisiologia , Animais , Orelha Interna/fisiologia , Células HEK293 , Humanos , Camundongos , Pinças Ópticas
3.
Neuron ; 99(3): 423-425, 2018 08 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30092209

RESUMO

Auditory transduction is fast and sensitive owing to the direct detection of mechanical stimuli by hair cells, the sensory receptors of the internal ear. A study by Dionne et al. (2018) in this issue of Neuron suggests how signals propagate through tip links, the cadherin-based strands that gate mechanically sensitive channels.


Assuntos
Células Ciliadas Auditivas , Mecanotransdução Celular , Caderinas
4.
Nat Commun ; 7: 12729, 2016 09 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27596919

RESUMO

Precise nanometre-scale imaging of soft structures at room temperature poses a major challenge to any type of microscopy because fast thermal fluctuations lead to significant motion blur if the position of the structure is measured with insufficient bandwidth. Moreover, precise localization is also affected by optical heterogeneities, which lead to deformations in the imaged local geometry, the severity depending on the sample and its thickness. Here we introduce quantitative thermal noise imaging, a three-dimensional scanning probe technique, as a method for imaging soft, optically heterogeneous and porous matter with submicroscopic spatial resolution in aqueous solution. By imaging both individual microtubules and collagen fibrils in a network, we demonstrate that structures can be localized with a precision of ∼10 nm and that their local dynamics can be quantified with 50 kHz bandwidth and subnanometre amplitudes. Furthermore, we show how image distortions caused by optically dense structures can be corrected for.

5.
Sci Rep ; 6: 23691, 2016 Mar 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27029285

RESUMO

We introduce a novel assay for membrane fusion of solid supported membranes on silica beads and on coverslips. Fusion of the lipid bilayers is induced by bringing an optically trapped bead in contact with the coverslip surface while observing the bead's thermal motion with microsecond temporal and nanometer spatial resolution using a three-dimensional position detector. The probability of fusion is controlled by the membrane tension on the particle. We show that the progression of fusion can be monitored by changes in the three-dimensional position histograms of the bead and in its rate of diffusion. We were able to observe all fusion intermediates including transient fusion, formation of a stalk, hemifusion and the completion of a fusion pore. Fusion intermediates are characterized by axial but not lateral confinement of the motion of the bead and independently by the change of its rate of diffusion due to the additional drag from the stalk-like connection between the two membranes. The detailed information provided by this assay makes it ideally suited for studies of early events in pure lipid bilayer fusion or fusion assisted by fusogenic molecules.


Assuntos
Dimiristoilfosfatidilcolina/química , Bicamadas Lipídicas/química , Fusão de Membrana , Fosfatidilcolinas/química , Fosfatidiletanolaminas/química , Movimento (Física) , Dióxido de Silício/química , Tensão Superficial , Termodinâmica , Fatores de Tempo
6.
Biophys J ; 105(5): 1182-91, 2013 Sep 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24010661

RESUMO

Molecular motor proteins are responsible for long-range transport of vesicles and organelles. Recent works have elucidated the richness of the transport complex, with multiple teams of similar and dissimilar motors and their cofactors attached to individual cargoes. The interaction among these different proteins, and with the microtubules along which they translocate, results in the intricate patterns of cargo transport observed in cells. High-precision and high-bandwidth measurements are required to capture the dynamics of these interactions, yet the crowdedness in the cell necessitates performing such measurements in vitro. Here, we show that endogenous cargoes, lipid droplets purified from Drosophila embryos, can be used to perform high-precision and high-bandwidth optical trapping experiments to study motor regulation in vitro. Purified droplets have constituents of the endogenous transport complex attached to them and exhibit long-range motility. A novel method to determine the quality of the droplets for high-resolution measurements in an optical trap showed that they compare well with plastic beads in terms of roundness, homogeneity, position sensitivity, and trapping stiffness. Using high-resolution and high-bandwidth position measurements, we demonstrate that we can follow the series of binding and unbinding events that lead to the onset of active transport.


Assuntos
Drosophila melanogaster/embriologia , Embrião não Mamífero/metabolismo , Metabolismo dos Lipídeos , Proteínas Motores Moleculares/metabolismo , Animais , Transporte Biológico , Embrião não Mamífero/citologia , Microtúbulos/metabolismo , Pinças Ópticas
7.
Chemphyschem ; 10(9-10): 1541-7, 2009 Jul 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19466704

RESUMO

We present a novel experimental method that solves two key problems in nondestructive mechanical studies of small biomolecules at the single-molecule level, namely the confirmation of single-molecule conditions and the discrimination against nonspecific binding. A biotin-avidin ligand-receptor couple is spanned between a glass slide and a 1 microm latex particle using short linker molecules. Optical tweezers are used to initiate bond formation and to follow the particle's thermal position fluctuations with nanometer spatial and microsecond temporal resolution. Here we show that each step in the specific binding process leads to an abrupt change in the magnitude of the particle's thermal position fluctuations, allowing us to count the number of bonds formed one by one. Moreover, three-dimensional position histograms calculated from the particle's fluctuations can be separated into well-defined categories reflecting different binding conditions (single specific, multiple specific, nonspecific). Our method brings quantitative mechanical single-molecule studies to the majority of proteins, paving the way for the investigation of a wide range of phenomena at the single-molecule level.


Assuntos
Proteínas/química , Avidina/química , Pinças Ópticas , Ligação Proteica , Temperatura
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