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Surface-Templated Nanobubbles Protect Proteins from Surface-Mediated Denaturation
Author(s) -
David S. Bull,
Daniel F. Kienle,
Andres Sosa,
Nathaniel Nelson,
Shambojit Roy,
N. Jennifer,
Daniel K. Schwartz,
Joel L. Kaar,
Andrew P. Goodwin
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.563
H-Index - 203
ISSN - 1948-7185
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jpclett.9b00806
Subject(s) - total internal reflection fluorescence microscope , förster resonance energy transfer , chemical physics , molecule , microscopy , reflection (computer programming) , materials science , biophysics , fluorescence , adsorption , chemistry , crystallography , optics , physics , organic chemistry , computer science , biology , programming language
In this Letter, we report that surface-bound nanobubbles reduce protein denaturation on methylated glass by irreversible protein shell formation. Single-molecule total internal reflection fluorescence (SM-TIRF) microscopy was combined with intramolecular Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) to study the conformational dynamics of nitroreductase (NfsB) on nanobubble-laden methylated glass surfaces, using reflection brightfield microscopy to register nanobubble locations with NfsB adsorption. First, NfsB adsorbed irreversibly to nanobubbles with no apparent desorption after 5 h. Moreover, virtually all (96%) of the NfsB molecules that interacted with nanobubbles remained folded, whereas less than 50% of NfsB molecules remained folded in the absence of nanobubbles on unmodified silica or methylated glass surfaces. This trend was confirmed by ensemble-average fluorometer TIRF experiments. We hypothesize that nanobubbles reduce protein damage by passivating strongly denaturing topographical surface defects. Thus, nanobubble stabilization on surfaces may have important implications for antifouling surfaces and improving therapeutic protein storage.

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