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Membrane Fluidity Sensing on the Single Virus Particle Level with Plasmonic Nanoparticle Transducers.

Amin FeizpourDavid StelterCrystal WongHisashi AkiyamaSuryaram GummuluruTom KeyesBjörn M Reinhard
Published in: ACS sensors (2017)
Viral membranes are nanomaterials whose fluidity depends on their composition, in particular, the cholesterol (chol) content. As differences in the membrane composition of individual virus particles can lead to different intracellular fates, biophysical tools capable of sensing the membrane fluidity on the single-virus level are required. In this manuscript, we demonstrate that fluctuations in the polarization of light scattered off gold or silver nanoparticle (NP)-labeled virus-like-particles (VLPs) encode information about the membrane fluidity of individual VLPs. We developed plasmonic polarization fluctuation tracking microscopy (PFTM) which facilitated the investigation of the effect of chol content on the membrane fluidity and its dependence on temperature, for the first time on the single-VLP level. Chol extraction studies with different methyl-β-cyclodextrin (MβCD) concentrations yielded a gradual decrease in polarization fluctuations as a function of time. The rate of chol extraction for individual VLPs showed a broad spread, presumably due to differences in the membrane composition for the individual VLPs, and this heterogeneity increased with decreasing MβCD concentration.
Keyphrases
  • single molecule
  • high throughput
  • optical coherence tomography
  • high speed
  • reactive oxygen species
  • energy transfer
  • visible light