Abstract

Single-molecule fluorescence microscopy is a key tool to investigate the chemo-mechanical coupling of microtubule-associated motor proteins, such as kinesin. However, a major limitation of the implementation of single-molecule observation is the concentration of fluorescently labeled molecules. For example, in total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy, the available concentration is of the order of 10nM. This concentration is much lower than the concentration of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) in vivo, hindering the single-molecule observation of fluorescently labeled ATP hydrolyzed by motor proteins under the physiologically relevant conditions. Here, we provide a method for the use of single-molecule fluorescence microscopy in the presence of ~500nM of fluorescently labeled ATP. To achieve this, a device equipped with nano-slits is used to confine excitation light into its slits as an expansion of zero-mode waveguides (ZMWs). Conventional ZMWs equip apertures with a diameter smaller than the wavelength of light to suppress background noise from the labeled molecules diffusing outside of the apertures. While they are not compatible with filamentous objects, our linear-ZMWs enable the usage of filamentous objects, such as microtubules. An experiment using linear-ZMWs demonstrated the successful exploration of the interaction between kinesin and ATP using single-molecule fluorescence microscopy.

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