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Intracellular transport by kinesin motors moving along their associated cytoskeletal filaments, microtubules, is essential to many biological processes. This active transport system can be reconstituted in vitro with the surface-adhered motors transporting the microtubules across a planar surface. In this geometry, the kinesin-microtubule system has been used to study active self-assembly, to power microdevices, and to perform analyte detection. Fundamental to these applications is the ability to characterize the interactions between the surface tethered motors and microtubules. Fluorescence Interference Contrast (FLIC) microscopy can illuminate the height of the microtubule above a surface, which, at sufficiently low surface densities of kinesin, also reveals the number, locations, and dynamics of the bound motors. © 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.

Citation

Virginia VanDelinder, George D Bachand. Characterizing the Number of Kinesin Motors Bound to Microtubules in the Gliding Motility Assay Using FLIC Microscopy. Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.). 2022;2430:93-104

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PMID: 35476327

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