4.8 Article

Efficient optical plasmonic tweezer-controlled single-molecule SERS characterization of pH-dependent amylin species in aqueous milieus

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 14, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-42812-3

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This study utilizes optical plasmonic trapping to construct a dynamic nanocavity for high-throughput single-molecule surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) characterizations in aqueous environments. The results provide mechanistic insight into pH-regulated amyloidogenesis and introduce a new approach for investigating complex biological processes at the single-molecule level.
It is challenging to characterize single or a few biomolecules in physiological milieus without excluding the influences of surrounding environment. Here we utilize optical plasmonic trapping to construct a dynamic nanocavity, which reduces the diffraction-limited detection volume and provides reproducible electromagnetic field enhancements to achieve high-throughput single-molecule surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) characterizations in aqueous environments. Specifically, we study human Islet Amyloid Polypeptide (amylin, hIAPP) under different physiological pH conditions by combining spectroscopic experiments and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Based on a statistically significant amount of time-dependent SERS spectra, two types of low-populated transient species of hIAPP containing either turn or beta-sheet structure among its predominant helix-coil monomers are characterized during the early-stage incubation at neutral condition, which play a crucial role in driving irreversible amyloid fibril developments even after a subsequent adjustment of pH to continue the prolonged incubation at acidic condition. Our results might provide profound mechanistic insight into the pH-regulated amyloidogenesis and introduce an alternative approach for investigating complex biological processes at the single-molecule level. Studying rare species in mixtures is challenging. Here, authors utilize on-and-off optical plasmonic trapping to control SERS-active nanocavity to analyse pH-dependent amylin species at single-molecule level, unveiling amyloid aggregation mechanisms.

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