A wireless centrifuge force microscope (CFM) enables multiplexed single-molecule experiments in a commercial centrifuge
Author(s) -
Tony Hoang,
Dhruv Patel,
Ken Halvorsen
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
review of scientific instruments
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.605
H-Index - 165
eISSN - 1089-7623
pISSN - 0034-6748
DOI - 10.1063/1.4961477
Subject(s) - centrifuge , materials science , microscope , shearing (physics) , molecule , dissociation (chemistry) , multiplexing , shear force , wireless , computer science , nanotechnology , optics , physics , chemistry , composite material , telecommunications , quantum mechanics , nuclear physics
The centrifuge force microscope (CFM) was recently introduced as a platform for massively parallel single-molecule manipulation and analysis. Here we developed a low-cost and self-contained CFM module that works directly within a commercial centrifuge, greatly improving accessibility and ease of use. Our instrument incorporates research grade video microscopy, a power source, a computer, and wireless transmission capability to simultaneously monitor many individually tethered microspheres. We validated the instrument by performing single-molecule force shearing of short DNA duplexes. For a 7 bp duplex, we observed over 1000 dissociation events due to force dependent shearing from 2 pN to 12 pN with dissociation times in the range of 10-100 s. We extended the measurement to a 10 bp duplex, applying a 12 pN force clamp and directly observing single-molecule dissociation over an 85 min experiment. Our new CFM module facilitates simple and inexpensive experiments that dramatically improve access to single-molecule analysis.
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