Interview for Faculty Position
Convex Lens-Induced Confinement: Enabling New
Biophysical Measurements Under Previously Inaccessible Conditions
Sabrina Leslie
Harvard University
A wide range of physiological processes rely on weak intermolecular
interactions that occur at high concentration, or over long time periods.
Probing such interactions presents a challenge to fluorescence microscopy,
the work horse for resolving biological processes at the molecular scale. To
address this challenge, I present a novel and practical fluorescence
imaging technique, convex lens induced confinement (CLIC), which enables
new biophysical measurements under previously inaccessible conditions. By
confining the molecules within a thin chamber, the CLIC technique dramatically
decreases background fluorescence while increasing imaging time. I show that
the enhanced background rejection can be used to probe the weak interaction
between myosin motor proteins and the requisite micromolar concentration
solutions of ATP that fuel their motion. Further, I am using the 10,000 fold
increase in per-molecule observation time of freely diffusing DNA to study
their interaction with the DNA-binding protein HMGB1 in free solution. The
CLIC system provides direct means to determine molecular size, which I
demonstrate for protein and DNA molecules.
Thursday, February 17th 2011, 11:00
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, R.E. Bell Conference Room (room 103)
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