Origin of nanomechanical cantilever motion generated from biomolecular interactions

Guanghua Wu(University of Southern California), Hai‐Feng Ji(University of Southern California), Karolyn M. Hansen(University of Southern California), Thomas Thundat(University of Southern California), Ram H. Datar(University of Southern California), Rick Cote(University of Southern California), Michael F. Hagan(University of Southern California), Arup K. Chakraborty(University of Southern California), Arun Majumdar(University of Southern California)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
February 6, 2001
Cited by 412Open Access
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Abstract

Generation of nanomechanical cantilever motion from biomolecular interactions can have wide applications, ranging from high-throughput biomolecular detection to bioactuation. Although it has been suggested that such motion is caused by changes in surface stress of a cantilever beam, the origin of the surface-stress change has so far not been elucidated. By using DNA hybridization experiments, we show that the origin of motion lies in the interplay between changes in configurational entropy and intermolecular energetics induced by specific biomolecular interactions. By controlling entropy change during DNA hybridization, the direction of cantilever motion can be manipulated. These thermodynamic principles were also used to explain the origin of motion generated from protein-ligand binding.


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