表征(材料科学)
原子力显微镜
材料科学
纳米技术
作者
Álvaro Ortega-Esteban,Natalia Martín-González,Francisco Moreno‐Madrid,Aida Llauró,Mercedes Hernando‐Pérez,Carmen San Martı́n,Pedro Pablo
出处
期刊:Methods in molecular biology
日期:2018-10-29
卷期号:: 259-278
被引量:8
标识
DOI:10.1007/978-1-4939-8894-5_15
摘要
Microscopes are used to characterize small objects with the help of probes that interact with the specimen, such as photons and electrons in optical and electron microscopies, respectively. In atomic force microscopy (AFM) the probe is a nanometric tip located at the end of a micro cantilever which palpates the specimen under study as a blind person manages a walking stick. In this way AFM allows obtaining nanometric resolution images of individual protein shells, such as viruses, in liquid milieu. Beyond imaging, AFM also enables not only the manipulation of single protein cages, but also the characterization of every physicochemical property able of inducing any measurable mechanical perturbation to the microcantilever that holds the tip. In this chapter we start revising some recipes for adsorbing protein shells on surfaces. Then we describe several AFM approaches to study individual protein cages, ranging from imaging to spectroscopic methodologies devoted for extracting physical information, such as mechanical and electrostatic properties. We also explain how a convenient combination of AFM and fluorescence methodologies entails monitoring genome release from individual viral shells during mechanical unpacking.
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