Anti-Brownian ELectrokinetic (ABEL) trapping of single β2-adrenergic receptors in the absence and presence of agonist
2012
The ABEL trap allows trapping of single biomolecules in solution for extended observation without immobilization. The
essential idea combines fluorescence-based position estimation with fast electrokinetic feedback in a microfluidic
geometry to counter the Brownian motion of a single nanoscale object, hence maintaining its position in the field of view
for hundreds of milliseconds to seconds. Such prolonged observation of single proteins allows access to slow dynamics,
as probed by any available photophysical observables. We have used the ABEL trap to study conformational dynamics
of the β2-adrenergic receptor, a key G-protein coupled receptor and drug target, in the absence and presence of agonist.
A single environment-sensitive dye reports on the receptor microenvironment, providing a real-time readout of
conformational change for each trapped receptor. The focus of this paper will be a quantitative comparison of the ligandfree
and agonist-bound receptor data from our ABEL trap experiments. We observe a small but clearly detectable shift in
conformational equilibria and a lengthening of fluctuation timescales upon binding of agonist. In order to quantify the
shift in state distributions and timescales, we apply nonparametric statistical tests to place error bounds on the resulting
single-molecule distributions.
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