Biomimetics (Dec 2023)

Statistical Study of Low-Intensity Single-Molecule Recognition Events Using DeepTip<sup>TM</sup> Probes: Application to the Pru p 3-Phytosphingosine System

  • Rafael Daza,
  • María Garrido-Arandia,
  • Daniel Corregidor-Ortiz,
  • Carla Isabel Pérez,
  • Luis Colchero,
  • Raquel Tabraue-Rubio,
  • Manuel Elices,
  • Gustavo V. Guinea,
  • Araceli Diaz-Perales,
  • José Pérez-Rigueiro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomimetics8080595
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 8
p. 595

Abstract

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The interaction between the plant lipid transfer protein Pru p 3 and phytosphingosine was assessed using an atomic force microscope. Phytosphingosine was covalently immobilized on DeepTipTM probes and Pru p 3 on MicroDeckTM functionalized substrates. Single-molecular interaction events between both molecules were retrieved and classified and the distribution for each one of the identified types was calculated. A success rate of over 70% was found by comparing the number of specific Pru p 3-phytosphingosine interaction events with the total number of recorded curves. The analysis of the distribution established among the various types of curves was further pursued to distinguish between those curves that can mainly be used for assessing the recognition between phytosphingosine (sensor molecule) and Pru p 3 (target molecule) in the context of affinity atomic force microscopy, and those that entail details of the interaction and might be employed in the context of force spectroscopy. The successful application of these functionalized probes and substrates to the characterization of the low-intensity hydrophobic interaction characteristic of this system is a clear indication of the potential of exploiting this approach with an extremely wide range of different biological molecules of interest. The possibility of characterizing molecular assembly events with single-molecule resolution offers an advantageous procedure to plough into the field of molecular biomimetics.

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