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Method Article
We present a method of preparing mica supported lipid bilayers for high resolution microscopy. Mica is transparent and flat on an atomic scale, but rarely used in imaging because of handling difficulties; our preparation results in even deposition of the mica sheet, and reduces the material used in bilayer preparation.
Supported lipid bilayers (SLBs) are widely used as a model for studying membrane properties (phase separation, clustering, dynamics) and its interaction with other compounds, such as drugs or peptides. However SLB characteristics differ depending on the support used.
Commonly used techniques for SLB imaging and measurements are single molecule fluorescence microscopy, FCS and atomic force microscopy (AFM). Because most optical imaging studies are carried out on a glass support, while AFM requires an extremely flat surface (generally mica), results from these techniques cannot be compared directly, since the charge and smoothness properties of these materials strongly influence diffusion. Unfortunately, the high level of manual dexterity required for the cutting and gluing thin slices of mica to the glass slide presents a hurdle to routine use of mica for SLB preparation. Although this would be the method of choice, such prepared mica surfaces often end up being uneven (wavy) and difficult to image, especially with small working distance, high numerical aperture lenses. Here we present a simple and reproducible method for preparing thin, flat mica surfaces for lipid vesicle deposition and SLB preparation. Additionally, our custom made chamber requires only very small volumes of vesicles for SLB formation. The overall procedure results in the efficient, simple and inexpensive production of high quality lipid bilayer surfaces that are directly comparable to those used in AFM studies.
The overall goal of the present protocol is to show a method for preparing mica surfaces for high resolution imaging of mica supported lipid bilayers (SLBs) using optical total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy (TIRFM) or confocal microscopy, which could also be combined with atomic force microscopy (AFM).
SLBs are a widely used model for numerous studies of lipid clustering, phase separation, dynamics of bilayer components or their interactions with peptides, proteins or other compounds1-5. Different substrates might be used for SLB formation (i.e. glass, mica, silicon dioxide, polymers) depending on the nature of the study4,6-8. Typical membrane studies rely on microscopy-based imaging techniques, such as TIRFM and AFM. Thus, for TIRFM imaging, a glass surface is a typical choice because glass is transparent. Preparation of glass is relatively easy, and the quality of the results is primarily determined by thorough surface cleaning prior to deposition of lipid vesicles. AFM due to its high axial resolution requires mica surfaces. Mica is a silicate mineral, with close to perfect basal cleavage. Thus, the freshly cleaved mica is atomically flat, allowing observation of membrane height differences even at the sub-nanometer scale9.
Diffusion studies using methods such as fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS), single molecule tracking (SMT), and fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) showed however, that lipid membrane dynamics depend heavily on the type of surface onto which they are deposited, whereby glass and mica can give widely varying results10,11. These differences include not only the diffusion coefficients of the membrane probes, but also the detection of separate populations of particles diffusing with different rates, and possibly switching between different states.
Thus, the direct comparison of results obtained using TIRFM and AFM techniques is often problematic, unless the same surface (in this case mica) is used. Although there are some studies where TIRFM and AFM bilayer imaging was conducted on the same mica surface12,13, mica is rarely used for optical microscopy, mostly because of handling problems. Mica preparation requires cutting by hand into thin leaflets, which are then glued to the coverslip using optical adhesive12. This method however requires some practice to achieve satisfactory results. Moreover, the surfaces obtained are often wavy and thick, making them difficult to use with low working distance, high numerical aperture lenses.
Mica surfaces prepared as described in this protocol are very thin (~220 μm, including the coverslip thickness of 170 μm) and extremely flat, avoiding “waviness”, which is critical for successful high resolution imaging. They can be used for TIRFM or confocal setups. Moreover, the same samples can be transferred to AFM, and even imaged simultaneously with TIRFM/confocal and AFM. Combining these two techniques allows direct correlation of diffusion behavior with bilayer membrane structure14. Because mica surfaces are freshly cleaved, they are clean and do not require time consuming, poorly reproducible, and potentially dangerous cleaning procedures (glass cleaning protocols usually include chemicals such as Piranha solution, sulfuric acid, sodium/potassium hydroxide). Mounting of a small chamber, also described in the protocol, reduces the volume of vesicles required for effective bilayer formation to less than 50 μl. Finally, the whole process of surface assembly is not time consuming (preparation takes less than 30 min), and does not require a high degree of manual skill, as does conventional mica cleavage and gluing.
1. Mica and Slides Preparation
2. Mica Assembly and Chamber Mounting
3. Supported Lipid Bilayer (SLB) Formation
The diffusion behavior of fluorescent lipid probes in SLBs is different depending on the substrate. TIRFM combined with the SMT technique is a valuable method for visualizing particle movements and extracting their diffusion coefficients. Single molecule signals of a Sphingomyelin-ATTO647N probe diffusing in a DOPC (1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine) bilayer supported on glass and mica are shown on the attached animated figure. The mica surface was prepared according to the protocol presented here. To est...
This protocol describes a method for preparing smooth and thin mica surfaces for lipid bilayer deposition and high resolution imaging. The technique requires minimal manual skills, limited mostly to the careful disassembly of the glass-mica-glass sandwich (step 2.8), which is critical for obtaining a high quality mica surface. Inspection of the freshly cleaved mica is always required at this point, since it is possible for the mica to detach from the optical adhesive without cleaving, leaving exposed areas of optical adh...
The authors have nothing to disclose.
The authors have no acknowledgements.
Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
Bath Sonicator | Fisher Scientific | FB15051 | |
Coverslips 24 x 50 mm - No H1.5 | Marienfeld | 102222 | |
DOPC | Avanti Polar Lipids | 850357 | |
Hellmanex III (detergent) | Hellma Analytics | 320.003 | |
Mica V-1 Grade | SPI Suppliers | 1872-CA | |
Optical Adhesive (high viscosity) | Norland Products | NOA63 | |
Optical Adhesive (low viscosity) | Norland Products | NOA60 | |
Sphingomyelin-ATTO647N | AttoTec | AD 647N-171 | |
UV lamp | Synoptics Ltd. | GelVue GVM20 | The lamp was set to 100% power |
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