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In situ ellipsometric study of surface immobilization of flagellar filaments
Authors:S. Kurunczi,A. Né  meth,P. Kozma,P. Petrik,A. Sebestyé  n,F. Vonderviszt,M. Fried
Affiliation:a Department of Photonics, Research Institute for Technical Physics and Materials Science, H-1121, Konkoly Thege Miklós út 29-33, Budapest, Hungary
b Department of Nanotechnology, Research Institute of Chemical and Process Engineering, Faculty of Information Technology, University of Pannonia, Egyetem u. 10, Veszprém, H-8200 Hungary
c Institute of Enzymology, Karolina út 29-33, Budapest, H-1113 Hungary
Abstract:Protein filaments composed of thousands of subunits are promising candidates as sensing elements in biosensors. In this work in situ spectroscopic ellipsometry is applied to monitor the surface immobilization of flagellar filaments. This study is the first step towards the development of layers of filamentous receptors for sensor applications.Surface activation is performed using silanization and a subsequent glutaraldehyde crosslinking. Structure of the flagellar filament layers immobilized on activated and non-activated Si wafer substrates is determined using a two-layer effective medium model that accounted for the vertical density distribution of flagellar filaments with lengths of 300-1500 nm bound to the surface. The formation of the first interface layer can be explained by the multipoint covalent attachment of the filaments, while the second layer is mainly composed of tail pinned filaments floating upwards with the free parts. As confirmed by atomic force microscopy, covalent immobilization resulted in an increased surface density compared to absorption.
Keywords:Protein immobilization   Flagellar filament   Ellipsometry   Biosensor
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