Abstract

Ligands mounted to surfaces via extensible tethers are present in nature and represent a growing class of molecules used to engineer adhesion in drug targeting, biosensing, self-assembling nanostructures, and in other biophysical research. Using a continuum approach with geometric and thermodynamic arguments, we derive a number of analytical expressions that relate key properties of single-tethered ligand-receptor interactions to multiple bond formation between curved surfaces. The theoretical predictions are in good agreement with measurements made with the surface forces apparatus. We establish that, when ligated, many tethers commonly used in biophysical research exhibit a discrete binding range that can be accurately measured with force spectroscopy. The distribution of bound ligated tethers is independent of the surfaces’ interaction radius, R. The bridging force scales linearly with R, the tether’s effective spring constant and grafting density, and with the ligand-receptor bond energy when the surfaces are in direct contact. These results are contrasted to bridging forces that evolve between plane-parallel geometries. Last, we show how our simple analytical reductions can be used to predict adhesive forces for STEALTH liposomes and other targeted and self-assembled nanoparticles.

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