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Portrait of Heiner Linke; Photo: Kennet Ruona

Heiner Linke

Professor, Deputy dean (prorektor) at Faculty of Engineering, LTH

Portrait of Heiner Linke; Photo: Kennet Ruona

Prolonged function and optimization of actomyosin motility for upscaled network-based biocomputation

Author

  • Aseem Salhotra
  • Jingyuan Zhu
  • Pradheebha Surendiran
  • Christoph Robert Meinecke
  • Roman Lyttleton
  • Marko Ušaj
  • Frida W. Lindberg
  • Marlene Norrby
  • Heiner Linke
  • Alf Månsson

Summary, in English

A stract Significant advancements have been made towards exploitation of naturally available molecular motors and their associated cytoskeletal filaments in nanotechnological applications. For instance, myosin motors and actin filaments from muscle have been used with the aims to establish new approaches in biosensing and network-based biocomputation. The basis for these developments is a version of the in vitro motility assay (IVMA) where surface-adsorbed myosin motors propel the actin filaments along suitably derivatized nano-scale channels on nanostructured chips. These chips are generally assembled into custom-made microfluidic flow cells. For effective applications, particularly in biocomputation, it is important to appreciably prolong function of the biological system. Here, we systematically investigated potentially critical factors necessary to achieve this, such as biocompatibility of different components of the flow cell, the degree of air exposure, assay solution composition and nanofabrication methods. After optimizing these factors we prolonged the function of actin and myosin in nanodevices for biocomputation from <20 min to >60 min. In addition, we demonstrated that further optimizations could increase motility run times to >20 h. Of great importance for the latter development was a switch of glucose oxidase in the chemical oxygen scavenger system (glucose oxidase–glucose–catalase) to pyranose oxidase, combined with the use of blocking actin (non-fluorescent filaments that block dead motors). To allow effective testing of these approaches we adapted commercially available microfluidic channel slides, for the first time demonstrating their usefulness in the IVMA. As part of our study, we also demonstrate that myosin motor fragments can be stored at -80 C for more than 10 years before use for nanotechnological purposes. This extended shelf-life is important for the sustainability of network-based biocomputation.

Department/s

  • Solid State Physics
  • NanoLund: Center for Nanoscience

Publishing year

2021-08

Language

English

Publication/Series

New Journal of Physics

Volume

23

Issue

8

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

IOP Publishing

Topic

  • Computer Systems
  • Biophysics
  • Other Physics Topics

Keywords

  • Actin
  • Biocomputation
  • In vitro motility assay
  • Molecular motors
  • Myosin
  • Nanofabrication

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1367-2630