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. 1999 Jan;76(1 Pt 1):500-8.
doi: 10.1016/S0006-3495(99)77218-8.

Reflection interference contrast microscopy combined with scanning force microscopy verifies the nature of protein-ligand interaction force measurements

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Reflection interference contrast microscopy combined with scanning force microscopy verifies the nature of protein-ligand interaction force measurements

J K Stuart et al. Biophys J. 1999 Jan.

Abstract

The integration of a stand-alone scanning force microscope (SFM) scanner with a reflection interference contrast microscope (RICM) makes it possible to measure directly the separation distance between the SFM probe and the sample surface. The SFM-RICM combination, when applied to the force measurements between ligand-derivatized SFM probe and a protein receptor-derivatized surface, showed that the anomalous force discontinuities often observed for such interacting pairs were indeed a real behavior characteristic of a particular experimental configuration. Apart from small discrepancies due to transient damping, commercially available cantilevers did behave in an ideal mechanical fashion, thus indicating that protein-ligand unbinding events were occurring at distances much larger than their maximum extended length. This external verification of separation distance requires a closer examination of the physical events occurring upon detachment of the surfaces. An alternative interpretation of such force measurements is proposed here in which the protein and/or ligand immobilization chemistry is called into question.

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