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Articles by Hung-Jen Wu in JoVE

 JoVE Bioengineering

Biyomarker Discovery için Mezogözenekli Silika İnce Filmler üzerine düşük molekül ağırlıklı Protein Zenginleştirme


JoVE 3876 4/17/2012

1Department of Nanomedicine, The Methodist Hospital Research Institute, 2CAS Key Laboratory for Biological Effects of Nanomaterials & Nanosafety, National Center for Nanoscience and Technology

Bu, insan serumu ile düşük molekül ağırlıklı proteinler ve peptitler selektif geri kazanımı için gözenekli silis ince film dayanan bir teknoloji geliştirilmiştir. Bizim gözenekli cips fiziko-kimyasal özellikleri ince peptid zenginleştirme önemli kontrolü sağlamak ve sonuçta tanısal amaçlı serum proteom profil ayarlı edildi.

Other articles by Hung-Jen Wu on PubMed

Specific Ion-dependent Attraction and Phase Behavior of Polymer-coated Colloids

This paper presents results demonstrating the role of temperature and specific ions in mediating attraction between polymer-coated colloids and determining their equilibrium phase behavior. In particular, theoretical predictions of continuum van der Waals attraction between poly(ethylene oxide)-poly(propylene oxide)-poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO-PPO-PEO)-coated polystyrene colloids are used to explain measured temperature and specific ion-dependent fluid-gel transitions in dispersions of these particles. Building on previous studies of PEO-PPO-PEO-coated polystyrene colloids dispersed in aqueous NaCl media, this work reports rheologically measured fluid-gel transitions as a function of temperature and NaCl/MgSO4 composition. Adhesive-sphere predictions of percolation thresholds are fit to measured fluid-gel data by allowing the adsorbed copolymer layer thickness as a single adjustable parameter. This allows the attraction between the PEO-PPO-PEO layers to be interpreted as a function of temperature and NaCl/MgSO4 composition. Quantitative predictions of a polymeric van der Waals attraction associated with the layer collapse in diminishing solvent conditions provides a simple mechanism for explaining the measured fluid-gel data as a dynamic percolation transition. Ultimately, this work identifies the importance of continuum polymeric van der Waals attraction for explaining specific ion-dependent phenomena.

Direct Measurement of Single and Ensemble Average Particle-surface Potential Energy Profiles

This work involves the development of a novel technique that integrates total internal reflection and video microscopy methods to simultaneously measure single particle and ensemble average particle-surface interactions. For the 2 mum silica colloids and glass coverslip used in this study, particle size polydispersity is found to be a dominant factor in determining the distribution of single particle profiles about ensemble average profiles. In conjunction with this observation, chemical and physical nonuniformity are not evident in any of our measurements even with sensitivity to interactions on the order of kT. One advantage of using ensemble averaging in conjunction with time averaging is the ability to dramatically decrease the time required to measure average particle-wall interactions which scales inversely with interfacial particle concentration. A number of experimental issues are addressed in the development of this technique including (1) combining single particle distribution functions, (2) statistical sampling of distribution functions using both time and ensemble averaging, and (3) correcting overlapping scattering signals between adjacent particles. The capabilities of the ensemble averaging technique are also demonstrated to provide unique measurements of particle-surface interactions in metastable systems by selecting only height excursions of levitated particles when calculating potentials. Ultimately, this new technique provides several important advantages over single particle measurements, which provides a foundation for measuring interactions in increasingly complex interfacial systems.

Measurement and Interpretation of Particle-particle and Particle-wall Interactions in Levitated Colloidal Ensembles

This paper reports measurements of particle-wall and particle-particle interactions in levitated colloidal ensembles using integrated total internal reflection microscopy (TIRM) and video microscopy (VM) techniques. In levitated colloidal ensembles with area fractions of phiA = 0.03-0.25, ensemble TIRM measured height distribution functions are used to interpret particle-wall interactions, and VM measured pair distribution functions are used to interpret particle-particle interactions using inverse Ornstein-Zernike (OZ) and three-dimensional inverse Monte Carlo (MC) analyses. An inconsistent finding is the observation of an anomalous long-range particle-particle attraction and recovery of the expected Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek (DLVO) particle-wall interactions for all concentrations examined. Because particle-wall and particle-particle potentials are expected to be consistent in several respects, the analytical and experimental methods employed in this investigation are examined for possible sources of error. Comparison of inverse OZ and three-dimensional inverse MC analyses are used to address uncertainties related to dimensionality, effects of particle concentration, and assumptions of the OZ theory and closure relations. The possible influence of charge heterogeneity and particle size polydispersity on measured distribution functions is discussed with regard to inconsistent particle-wall and particle-particle potentials. Ultimately, achieving a consistent understanding of particle-wall and particle-particle interactions in interfacial and confined colloidal systems is essential to numerous complex fluid and advanced material technologies.

Phosphatized Polar Lobe-forming Embryos from the Precambrian of Southwest China

In developing embryos of some extant spiralian animals, polar lobe formation is one of the symmetry-breaking mechanisms for segregation of maternal cytoplasmic substances to certain blastomeres and not others. Polar lobe formation leads to unique early cleavage morphologies that include trilobed, J-shaped, and five-lobed structures. Fossil embryos similar to modern lobeforming embryos are recognized from the Precambrian Doushantuo Formation phosphates, Weng'an, Guizhou Province, China. These embryos are abundant and form a developmental sequence comparable to different developing stages observed in lobe-forming embryos of extant spiralians. These data imply that lobe formation is an evolutionarily ancient process of embryonic specification.

Mapping Patterned Potential Energy Landscapes with Diffusing Colloidal Probes

We report a new method for mapping patterned surfaces based on monitoring the interactions of freely diffusing colloidal probes with pattern features to generate measured potential energy landscapes. Evanescent wave scattering and video microscopy are used to track 3D center positions of nominal 2 microm silica colloids as they diffuse over 5-20-nm-thick patterned gold films. An analysis of ensemble-averaged particle height histograms on different pattern features using Boltzmann's equation produces local electrostatic and van der Waals potentials in good agreement with independent measurements and predictions. Absolute separation is obtained from theoretical fits to measured potential-energy profiles and direct measurement by depositing silica colloids onto gold surfaces via electrophoretic deposition. As colloidal probe and pattern feature dimensions become comparable, potential energy profiles suffer some distortion due to the increased probability of probes sampling pattern feature edges. An analysis of interfacial colloidal probe diffusion in conjunction with potential energy measurements demonstrates a consistent interpretation of dissipative and conservative forces in these measurements. Future extensions of this work should produce similar approaches for interrogating physical, chemical, and biomolecular heterogeneous/patterned surfaces and structures with diffusing colloidal probes.

Diffusing Colloidal Probes of Protein and Synthetic Macromolecule Interactions

A new approach is described for measuring kT and nanometer scale protein-protein and protein-synthetic macromolecule interactions. The utility of this method is demonstrated by measuring interactions of bovine serum albumin (BSA) and copolymers with exposed polyethyleneoxide (PEO) moieties adsorbed to hydrophobically modified colloids and surfaces. Total internal reflection and video microscopy are used to track three-dimensional trajectories of many single diffusing colloids that are analyzed to yield interaction potentials, mean-square displacements, and colloid-surface association lifetimes. A criterion is developed to identify colloids as being levitated, associated, or deposited based on energetic, spatial, statistical, and temporal information. Whereas levitation and deposition occur for strongly repulsive or attractive potentials, association is exponentially sensitive to weak interactions influenced by adsorbed layer architectures and surface heterogeneity. Systematic experiments reveal how BSA orientation and PEO molecular weight produce adsorbed layers that either conceal or expose substrate heterogeneities to generate a continuum of colloid-surface association lifetimes. These measurements provide simultaneous access to a broad range of information that consistently indicates purely repulsive BSA and PEO interactions and a role for surface heterogeneity in colloid-surface association. The demonstrated capability to measure nonspecific protein interactions provides a basis for future measurements of specific protein interactions.

Resonant Effects in Evanescent Wave Scattering of Polydisperse Colloids

Measurements and predictions are reported to understand large variations in evanescent wave (EW) scattering intensities between different particles from the same batch of single mode, polydisperse colloids. Measured EW scattering intensity distributions are obtained for three different micrometer sized latex particles irreversibly deposited onto glass surfaces. Predicted EW scattering intensity distributions are obtained using measured particle size distributions as input in a Mie theory for the three-dimensional scattering of a sphere under EW illumination. Good agreement is observed between measured and predicted EW scattering intensity distributions using no adjustable parameters. Our results indicate how finite polydispersity together with resonant effects produce large, nonlinear intensity variations between particles that appear to be physically and chemically uniform. Our findings allow such resonant effects to be understood and exploited in EW based particle-surface characterization techniques (e.g., using total internal reflections, surface plasmons) and chemical and biomolecular sensing applications (e.g., using whispering gallery modes).

Altered Actin Centripetal Retrograde Flow in Physically Restricted Immunological Synapses

Antigen recognition by T cells involves large scale spatial reorganization of numerous receptor, adhesion, and costimulatory proteins within the T cell-antigen presenting cell (APC) junction. The resulting patterns can be distinctive, and are collectively known as the immunological synapse. Dynamical assembly of cytoskeletal network is believed to play an important role in driving these assembly processes. In one experimental strategy, the APC is replaced with a synthetic supported membrane. An advantage of this configuration is that solid structures patterned onto the underlying substrate can guide immunological synapse assembly into altered patterns. Here, we use mobile anti-CD3epsilon on the spatial-partitioned supported bilayer to ligate and trigger T cell receptor (TCR) in live Jurkat T cells. Simultaneous tracking of both TCR clusters and GFP-actin speckles reveals their dynamic association and individual flow patterns. Actin retrograde flow directs the inward transport of TCR clusters. Flow-based particle tracking algorithms allow us to investigate the velocity distribution of actin flow field across the whole synapse, and centripetal velocity of actin flow decreases as it moves toward the center of synapse. Localized actin flow analysis reveals that, while there is no influence on actin motion from substrate patterns directly, velocity differences of actin are observed over physically trapped TCR clusters. Actin flow regains its velocity immediately after passing through confined TCR clusters. These observations are consistent with a dynamic and dissipative coupling between TCR clusters and viscoelastic actin network.

Template-assisted Assembly: Scanning Tunneling Microscopy Study of Solvent-dependent Adlattices of Alkyl-derivatized Tetrathiafulvalene

The self-assembly of an adsorbate as a function of the strength of solvent-substrate adsorption is an important yet relatively unexplored subject. In this study, how the strength of solvent-substrate adsorption and solvent-solvent attraction affects the assembly of tetrakis(octadecylthio)tetrathiafulvalene (1) is scrutinized by scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). For solvents with strong intermolecular interactions and adsorption onto graphite, such as long n-alkanes (C(n)H(2n+2), n ≥ 13), STM reveals that the solvent molecules form lamellae which become a template to direct the assembly of 1 into one-dimensional arrays. The lengths of one of the unit cell vectors for the assemblies are increased and well correlated with the solvent sizes. In situ STM monitoring of 1 introduced onto graphite with preadsorbed n-tetradecane adlattices shows that the developed assemblies of 1 have striped features aligned parallel to the underlying template. In contrast, for solvents with weak adsorption, such as short n-alkanes (C(n)H(2n+2), n ≤ 12), toluene, and 1,2,4-trichlorobenzene, the adlattice structures of 1 are solvent-independent.

Myosin IIA Modulates T Cell Receptor Transport and CasL Phosphorylation During Early Immunological Synapse Formation

Activation of T cell receptor (TCR) by antigens occurs in concert with an elaborate multi-scale spatial reorganization of proteins at the immunological synapse, the junction between a T cell and an antigen-presenting cell (APC). The directed movement of molecules, which intrinsically requires physical forces, is known to modulate biochemical signaling. It remains unclear, however, if mechanical forces exert any direct influence on the signaling cascades. We use T cells from AND transgenic mice expressing TCRs specific to the moth cytochrome c 88-103 peptide, and replace the APC with a synthetic supported lipid membrane. Through a series of high spatiotemporal molecular tracking studies in live T cells, we demonstrate that the molecular motor, non-muscle myosin IIA, transiently drives TCR transport during the first one to two minutes of immunological synapse formation. Myosin inhibition reduces calcium influx and colocalization of active ZAP-70 (zeta-chain associated protein kinase 70) with TCR, revealing an influence on signaling activity. More tellingly, its inhibition also significantly reduces phosphorylation of the mechanosensing protein CasL (Crk-associated substrate the lymphocyte type), raising the possibility of a direct mechanical mechanism of signal modulation involving CasL.

Characterization of Dynamic Actin Associations with T-cell Receptor Microclusters in Primary T Cells

T cell triggering through T-cell antigen receptors (TCRs) results in spatial assembly of the receptors on multiple length scales. This assembly is mediated by the T cell actin cytoskeleton, which reorganizes in response to TCR phosphorylation and then induces the coalescence of TCRs into microclusters, followed by their unification into a micrometer-scale structure. The exact outcomes of the association of TCRs with a dynamic and fluctuating actin network across these length scales are not well characterized, but it is clear that weak and transient interactions at the single-molecule level sum to yield significant receptor rearrangements at the plasma membrane. We used the hybrid live cell-nanopatterned supported lipid bilayer system to quantitatively probe the actin-TCR interaction in primary T cells. A specialized tracking algorithm revealed that actin slows as it passes over TCR clusters in a direction-dependent manner with respect to the resistance against TCR motion. We also observed transient actin enrichments at sites corresponding to putative TCR clusters that far exceeded pure stochastic fluctuations and described an image time-autocorrelation analysis method to quantify these accumulations.

Double Stranded Polymeric Ladderphanes with 16-π-electron Antiaromatic Metallocycle Linkers

Three double stranded polymeric ladderphanes with 16-π-electron antiaromatic metallocycle linkers are synthesised by ring opening metathesis polymerisation of the corresponding bisnorbornene monomers. Scanning tunnelling microscopic (STM) images indicate that these polymers can assemble nicely on a graphite surface to form a highly ordered pattern which has been observed in other ladderphanes with different kinds of aromatic linkers. Little change in (1)H NMR, absorption spectra and electrochemical oxidation potential between these polymers and the corresponding monomers suggest that there would be no interactions between adjacent antiaromatic linkers in these polymeric ladderphanes. Presumably, the distance between two antiaromatic rings in these ladderphanes (5-6 Å) is far too long in comparison with that between two rings in methylene-bridged antiaromatic superphanes (2.5 Å<), where stabilisation is predicted by theoretical calculations.

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