Adsorption kinetics of human vimentin on negatively charged substrates (mica, silica, and polymer particles) was analyzed using atomic force microscopy (AFM), quartz microbalance (QCM), and the laser doppler velocimetry (LDV)… Click to show full abstract
Adsorption kinetics of human vimentin on negatively charged substrates (mica, silica, and polymer particles) was analyzed using atomic force microscopy (AFM), quartz microbalance (QCM), and the laser doppler velocimetry (LDV) method. AFM studies realized under diffusion conditions proved that the adsorbed protein layer mainly consisted of aggregates in the form of compact tetramers and hexamers of a size equal to 11–12 nm. These results were consistent with vimentin adsorption kinetics under flow conditions investigated by QCM. It was established that vimentin aggregates efficiently adsorbed on the negatively charged silica sensor at pH 3.5 and 7.4, forming compact layers with the coverage reaching 3.5 mg m–2. Additionally, the formation of the vimentin corona at polymer particles was examined using the LDV method and interpreted in terms of the electrokinetic model. This allowed us to determine the zeta potential of the corona as a function of pH and the electrokinetic charge of aggregates, which was equal to −0.7 e nm–2 at pH 7.4 in a 10 mM NaCl solution. The anomalous adsorption of aggregates exhibiting an average negative charge on the negatively charged substrates was interpreted as a result of a heterogeneous charge distribution. These investigations confirmed that it is feasible to deposit stable vimentin layers both at planar substrates and at carrier particles with well-controlled coverage and zeta potential. They can be used for investigations of vimentin interactions with various ligands including receptors of the innate immune system, immunoglobulins, bacterial virulence factors, and spike proteins of viruses.
               
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