TY - JOUR
T1 - Recent advances in the application of atomic force microscopy to structural biology
AU - Dumitru, Andra C.
AU - Koehler, Melanie
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2023/6
Y1 - 2023/6
N2 - The application of atomic force microscopy (AFM) for functional imaging and manipulating biomolecules at all levels of organization has enabled great progress in the structural biology field over the last decades, contributing to the discovery of novel structural entities of biological significance across many disciplines ranging from biochemistry, biomedicine and biophysics to molecular and cell biology, up to food systems and beyond. AFM has the capability to generate high-resolution topographic images spanning from the submolecular to the (sub)cellular range and can probe biochemical and biophysical sample properties in close to native conditions with excellent temporal resolution. Instrumental developments in the past decade enable dynamical structural and conformational studies of single biomolecules and new techniques for structural and chemical modification of the AFM probe have converted the cantilever into a versatile tool to study different biological phenomena, such as the mechanical stability of biomolecular complexes or the force induced dynamic changes of mechanically stressed proteins at the nanoscopic level. To improve the functionality of AFM and approach dynamic processes of complex biological systems ex vivo, AFM is combined with complementary microscopy, nanoscopy and spectroscopy tools. These multimethodological approaches provide unprecedented possibilities of probing physical, chemical and biological properties of complex cellular systems with high spatio-temporal resolution, leading to novel applications that correlate structural results with functional biochemical, biophysical, immunological, or genetic data of the system under study.
AB - The application of atomic force microscopy (AFM) for functional imaging and manipulating biomolecules at all levels of organization has enabled great progress in the structural biology field over the last decades, contributing to the discovery of novel structural entities of biological significance across many disciplines ranging from biochemistry, biomedicine and biophysics to molecular and cell biology, up to food systems and beyond. AFM has the capability to generate high-resolution topographic images spanning from the submolecular to the (sub)cellular range and can probe biochemical and biophysical sample properties in close to native conditions with excellent temporal resolution. Instrumental developments in the past decade enable dynamical structural and conformational studies of single biomolecules and new techniques for structural and chemical modification of the AFM probe have converted the cantilever into a versatile tool to study different biological phenomena, such as the mechanical stability of biomolecular complexes or the force induced dynamic changes of mechanically stressed proteins at the nanoscopic level. To improve the functionality of AFM and approach dynamic processes of complex biological systems ex vivo, AFM is combined with complementary microscopy, nanoscopy and spectroscopy tools. These multimethodological approaches provide unprecedented possibilities of probing physical, chemical and biological properties of complex cellular systems with high spatio-temporal resolution, leading to novel applications that correlate structural results with functional biochemical, biophysical, immunological, or genetic data of the system under study.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85152940727
U2 - 10.1016/j.jsb.2023.107963
DO - 10.1016/j.jsb.2023.107963
M3 - Article
C2 - 37044358
AN - SCOPUS:85152940727
SN - 1047-8477
VL - 215
JO - Journal of Structural Biology
JF - Journal of Structural Biology
IS - 2
M1 - 107963
ER -