4.6 Article

Protein Dielectrophoresis: A Tale of Two Clausius-Mossottis-Or Something Else?

Journal

MICROMACHINES
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/mi13020261

Keywords

Clausius-Mossotti function; dielectric beta-dispersion; dielectrophoresis; electrokinetics; Lorentz cavity; Maxwell cavity; molecular dynamics simulations; proteins

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Standard DEP theory fails to accurately describe the DEP experimental data of different proteins, while a new theory based on molecular dynamics simulations replaces the macroscopic boundary-value problem with calculation of cross-correlation between protein and water dipoles. The empirical and formal theory predicts a positive DEP response for protein molecules at MHz frequencies, which is consistent with electrode-based experiments, but insulator-based experiments report negative DEP responses.
Standard DEP theory, based on the Clausius-Mossotti (CM) factor derived from solving the boundary-value problem of macroscopic electrostatics, fails to describe the dielectrophoresis (DEP) data obtained for 22 different globular proteins over the past three decades. The calculated DEP force appears far too small to overcome the dispersive forces associated with Brownian motion. An empirical theory, employing the equivalent of a molecular version of the macroscopic CM-factor, predicts a protein's DEP response from the magnitude of the dielectric beta-dispersion produced by its relaxing permanent dipole moment. A new theory, supported by molecular dynamics simulations, replaces the macroscopic boundary-value problem with calculation of the cross-correlation between the protein and water dipoles of its hydration shell. The empirical and formal theory predicts a positive DEP response for protein molecules up to MHz frequencies, a result consistently reported by electrode-based (eDEP) experiments. However, insulator-based (iDEP) experiments have reported negative DEP responses. This could result from crystallization or aggregation of the proteins (for which standard DEP theory predicts negative DEP) or the dominating influences of electrothermal and other electrokinetic (some non-linear) forces now being considered in iDEP theory.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available