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- 2012 AIChE Annual Meeting
- Engineering Sciences and Fundamentals
- Biomolecules at Interfaces
- (407c) Interfacial Protein Dynamics Resolved Using Single-Molecule Tracking
Proteins were found to adsorb in different aggregation states (i.e. monomers, dimers, etc.) as evidenced by fluorescence intensities that were roughly integer multiples of the lowest observed intensity. Aggregation number was found to subsequently affect their surface affinity and mobility, with larger aggregates exhibiting longer surface residence times and slower diffusion. All protein species were found to be capable of multiple modes of surface interaction as evidenced by multiple observed characteristic residence times and diffusion coefficients, even for monomers. Temperature studies of desorption and diffusion allowed us to determine the apparent Arrhenius activation energy of each mode of surface interaction.
Notably, activation energies of all modes of desorption and diffusion were relatively weak (< 5 kBT). Coupled with the observation that the mean residence time of a single protein is relatively short (~1s) for all proteins on all surfaces, it is apparent that direct protein-surface interactions are insufficient to explain the formation of stable protein layers. Future work will focus on protein-protein interactions and the indirect role of the surface in mediating these interactions.