Abstract
High-speed atomic force microscopy (AFM) enabled the imaging of protein interactions with millisecond time resolutions (10 fps). However, the acquisition of nanomechanical maps of proteins is about 100 times slower. Here, we developed a high-speed bimodal AFM that provided high-spatial resolution maps of the elastic modulus, the loss tangent, and the topography at imaging rates of 5 fps. The microscope was applied to identify the initial stages of the self-assembly of the collagen structures. By following the changes in the physical properties, we identified four stages, nucleation and growth of collagen precursors, formation of tropocollagen molecules, assembly of tropocollagens into microfibrils, and alignment of microfibrils to generate microribbons. Some emerging collagen structures never matured, and after an existence of several seconds, they disappeared into the solution. The elastic modulus of a microfibril (∼4 MPa) implied very small stiffness (∼3 × 10–6 N/m). Those values amplified the amplitude of the collagen thermal fluctuations on the mica plane, which facilitated microribbon build-up.
Highlights
High-speed AFM enabled the imaging of protein interactions with millisecond time resolutions (10 fps)
The HS-bimodal AFM characterized the early stages of the self-assembly of collagen fibrils on a mica surface by providing time-resolved and high-spatial resolution maps of the topography and the mechanical properties of collagen structures during growth
We demonstrated that high-speed bimodal AFM provided quantitative mechanical property mapping in liquid at high-speeds (5 fps), high-spatial resolution and with a high elastic modulus sensitivity (0.1 MPa)
Summary
High-speed AFM enabled the imaging of protein interactions with millisecond time resolutions (10 fps). We developed a high-speed bimodal AFM that provided high-spatial resolution maps of the elastic modulus, the loss tangent and the topography at imaging rates of 5.7 fps.
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