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Method Article
A method of using solid-state nanopores to monitor the non-specific adsorption of proteins onto an inorganic surface is described. The method employs the resistive-pulse principle, allowing for the adsorption to be probed in real-time and at the single-molecule level. Because the process of single protein adsorption is far from equilibrium, we propose the employment of parallel arrays of synthetic nanopores, enabling for the quantitative determination of the apparent first-order reaction rate constant of protein adsorption as well as and the Langmuir adsorption constant.
Solid-state nanopores have been used to perform measurements at the single-molecule level to examine the local structure and flexibility of nucleic acids 1-6, the unfolding of proteins 7, and binding affinity of different ligands 8. By coupling these nanopores to the resistive-pulse technique 9-12, such measurements can be done under a wide variety of conditions and without the need for labeling 3. In the resistive-pulse technique, an ionic salt solution is introduced on both sides of the nanopore. Therefore, ions are driven from one side of the chamber to the other by an applied transmembrane potential, resulting in a steady current. The partitioning of an analyte into the nanopore causes a well-defined deflection in this current, which can be analyzed to extract single-molecule information. Using this technique, the adsorption of single proteins to the nanopore walls can be monitored under a wide range of conditions 13. Protein adsorption is growing in importance, because as microfluidic devices shrink in size, the interaction of these systems with single proteins becomes a concern. This protocol describes a rapid assay for protein binding to nitride films, which can readily be extended to other thin films amenable to nanopore drilling, or to functionalized nitride surfaces. A variety of proteins may be explored under a wide range of solutions and denaturing conditions. Additionally, this protocol may be used to explore more basic problems using nanopore spectroscopy.
1. Manufacture of solid-state nanopores in silicon nitride membranes
2. Wetting of the solid-state nanopore
3. Monitoring protein adsorption
4. Possibilities for functionalization of the nanopores
There exist several methods for applying functional groups to silicon nitride 22,23. Most nitride films have a thin oxide layer on the outside and exposure to ozone can create an additional oxide layer, if necessary. Different organosilanes can be used and self-assembled onto such layers. Of particular interest is aminosilane, which self-assembles and can be modified further (i.e., carboxylic acid and aldehydes), allowing for the inspection of a range of organic surfaces. After a nanopore has been washed with piranha and secured in the chamber, amine can be added directly to the chamber bath with a supporting electrolyte of 0.5 M TBACl (tetrabutylammonium) and anhydrous MeOH (methanol) used as a solvent. Monolayer formation can be monitored by the application of a 400 mV voltage bias and the measurement of the current drop 23.
5. Determination of the apparent first-order reaction rate constant and the Langmuir adsorption constant using parallel nanopore arrays
5.1 The apparent first-order reaction rate constants for absorption and desorption
We emphasize that the positive aspect of this methodology is its ability to observe individual adsorptions at the single-molecule level. The single-molecule measurements of protein adsorption onto an inorganic surface can be scaled up by employing parallel arrays of solid-state nanopores. The parallel array of nanopores is necessary because of the need to assay many pores to get reliable statistics. To this end, the use of a nanopore array would allow the monitoring of individual adsorptions as well as the measurement of multiple events for further analysis. An array of nanopores in silicon nitride may be formed by the above protocol simply by drilling multiple holes in the sample. Each nanopore should be of similar size. Arrays of nanopores of 6x6 or 7x7 should be adequate. Upon addition of protein analyte in the chamber, the current will decay in an exponential manner with a following expression:
It = I∞ - (I∞ - I0)exp(-k't)
Here, It, denotes the current at an experimental time t. I0 is the original current passing through the nanopore array. I∞ indicates the current at saturation level (i.e., infinity). k' is the apparent first-order reaction rate constant, which can be determined from the fit of the experimental curve. A greater k' can be interpreted as a faster adsorption rate. The ratio I∞/I0, also called the normalized saturation current, is a dimensionless number between 0 and 1. This parameter is a measure of the occupancy by the adsorbed protein analytes. Therefore, each distinct experimental condition should be associated with two specific output parameters I∞/I0 and k'.
It should be noted that the apparent first-order adsorption rate constants and normalized currents are impacted by the effective time spent by proteins within the nanopores. This time is dependent on the concentration of protein analytes in bulk aqueous phase 24. Therefore, additional correction of these numbers needs to be implemented based upon the effective time spent by the proteins within the nanopore interior. We suggest measuring the frequency of fast (translocation) events and multiplying it by the average dwell time of such events. This will give the average time of proteins spent within the nanopore interior per unit time.
The rate constant of desorption can be determined using a parallel array of nanopores as well. As soon as the current level reaches saturation (I∞), the voltage should be reversed, so no more proteins are trapped into the nanopores. Desorption of individual proteins will be accompanied by the alteration of the recorded current towards greater values. The rate constant will be then extracted from the rise in the current level.
5.2 The Langmuir adsorption constant
The absorption of protein analytes onto the inorganic surfaces of the nanopores is dependent on the protein concentration in aqueous phase. This phenomenon has already been observed at the single-molecule level 13. If θ represents the normalized saturation current (I∞ / I0), then a typical Langmuir isotherm equation is given by the following expression:
where C is the protein concentration in the aqueous phase. α is the Langmuir adsorption constant. This constant increases with an increase in the binding energy of adsorption and with a decrease in temperature. The collection of the θ data points will employ measurements with parallel arrays carried out at various protein concentrations in aqueous phase. Data should be analyzed in combination with other techniques to verify the magnitude of the fitted Langmuir adsorption constant. In addition, full-atomistic molecular dynamics simulations 25,26 might be also used to help the interpretations of the obtained experimental data.
6. Representative Results
Typical results for solid-state nanopores will be as follows. The open pore current should be highly stable, as seen in Fig. 4a. The I/V characteristics of the nanopore should be highly linear in 1 M KCl, 10 potassium phosphate, pH 7.4, as seen in Fig. 2. The slope of a linear fit to the I/V curve will provide the unitary conductance of the nanopore. The conductance has a direct relationship to the nanopore diameter and should match the equation: , where G is the conductance of the nanopore, d is its diameter, l is its length, and σ is the conductivity of the solution in the chamber 14. This value should match to within 30%. If it is too small, your pore is likely not wetted. With addition of protein, rapid events should ensue, as seen in Fig. 4b. Protein adsorption is a long-lived current drop as displayed in Fig. 4c. Some proteins are highly labile and undergo structural transformation within the pore interior. In this case, the long-lived voltage drop will be accompanied by rapid fluctuations.
Figure 1. Solid-state nanopore fabricated using a Tecnai F20 S/TEM. The pore was drilled in STEM mode to a diameter of 20 nm. The image was taken in bright-field TEM mode. Nitride was 30 nm thick.
Figure 2. Chamber used for housing a single solid-state nanopore in resistive-pulse measurements. A) Chamber and a silicon chip with free-standing nitride window (TEM grid). The nanopore is drilled into the nitride before loading. Red O-rings are used to form a good seal about the chip, which separates two baths of ionic solution. B) Schematic of the chamber showing placement of solution baths and electrodes with respect to the nanopore.
Figure 3. Typical I/V traces for solid-state nanopores of different diameters. Single-channel electrical traces were taken in 1 M KCl, 20 mM Tris, pH 8.5. Nanopores were drilled in 30 nm thick silicon nitride. Note nitride thickness will affect the unitary conductance of the nanopore.
Figure 4. Measured single-channel current traces and the detection of protein adsorption. A) A single-channel electrical trace showing the open current of a 10 nm diameter nanopore. B) Current deflections represent partitioning of bovine serum albumin (BSA) into the interior of the nanopore. C) Adsorption of BSA onto the nitride surface. All traces are from the same nanopore in 1 M KCl, 10 mM potassium phosphate, pH 7.4. The applied transmembrane potential was +40 mV and BSA was added to the grounded chamber bath at a concentration of 120 nM.
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Spontaneous adsorption of proteins onto solid-state surfaces 27-29 is fundamentally important in a number of areas, such as biochip applications and design of a new class of functional hybrid biomaterials. Previous studies have shown that proteins adsorbed to solid-state surfaces do not show lateral mobility or significant desorption rates, and therefore protein adsorption is generally considered an irreversible and nonspecific process 30-32. Protein adsorption onto solid state surfaces is thought t...
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We have nothing to disclose.
The authors would like to thank John Grazul (Cornell University), Andre Marziali (The University of British Columbia at Vancouver) and Vincent Tabard-Cossa (The University of Ottawa) for their advice. This work is funded in part by grants from the US National Science Foundation (DMR-0706517 and DMR-1006332) and the National Institutes of Health (R01-GM088403). The nanopore drilling was performed at the Electron Microscopy Facility of the Cornell Center for Materials Research (CCMR) with support from the National Science Foundation - Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers (MRSEC) program (DMR 0520404). The preparation of the silicon nitride membranes was performed at the Cornell NanoScale Facility, a member of the National Nanotechnology Infrastructure Network, which is supported by the National Science Foundation (Grant ECS-0335765).
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Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
Tecnai F20 S/TEM | FEI | S/TEM requires acceleration voltage ≥200kV and field-emission source. | |
20 nm thick silicon nitride membrane window for TEM | SPI Supplies | 4163SN-BA | |
Axon Axopatch 200B patch-clamp amplifier | Molecular Devices | ||
Axon Digidata 1440A | Molecular Devices | ||
pCLAMP 10 software | Molecular Devices | Electrophysiology Data Acquisition and Analysis Software | |
Sulfuric Acid | Fisher Scientific | A300 | |
hydrogen peroxide | Fisher Scientific | H325 | |
silicone O-rings | McMaster-Carr | 003 S70 | Alternatively use PDMS |
silver wire | Sigma-Aldrich | 348759 | For electrodes |
SPC Technology, D sub contact, pin | Newark Inc | 9K4978 | For electrodes |
potassium chloride | Sigma-Aldrich | P9541 | |
potassium phosphate dibasic | Sigma-Aldrich | P2222 | |
potassium phosphate monobasic | Sigma-Aldrich | P5379 | |
PDMS | Dow Corning | Sylgar 184 Elastomer set. For making chamber. | |
Kwik-Cast Sealant | World Precision Instruments, Inc. | KWIK-CAST | Fast acting silicone sealant |
hot plate | Fisher Scientific | ||
Faraday cage |
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