dc.description.abstract |
Biomolecular adsorption is an important process which arises over the surface of
several different biomedical devices and sensing surfaces. Nanotechnology involves a
rich study of materials with modified physico-chemical, electrical, and optical properties.
Amalgamating biomolecules with nanomaterials is ubiquitously involved in sensor chip
designs or biomedical devices or in-vivo theragnostic. Hence, it is crucial to know the
interfacial behavior and molecular conformation of biomolecules and nanoparticles
distinctively in order to correlate the fundamental attributes of their complexation. We
have worked with protein and DNA, both of which provide adaptability, structural
flexibility, amphiphilicity, and site-specificity. DNA and protein molecules proffer a
suitable opportunity to understand the bottom-up oriented approach of biomolecular
interfaces and nano-bio interactions. The present thesis work encompasses the importance
of interfaces in decoding the molecular-scale phenomena involving phase-separation,
surface tensiometry perturbations, surface adsorption propensity, molecular kinetics,
understanding binding interactions at interface, surface density, molecular orientation, and
the role of the surrounding environment in modulating the molecular structure. Several
research works done in analyzing the biomolecular fundamentals and nano-bio
interactions have been performed using surface-specific spectroscopic techniques like
surface plasmon resonance, mass spectrometry, X-ray diffraction, or surface-enhanced
Raman spectroscopy. However, they involved vacuum-aided functioning, need of
crystallite sample, sample labeling or modification, and sophisticated high-energy
synchrotron sources which could change the morphology and molecular associations
under analysis. Our main aim is to study these processes with minimal modification
procedures and under pristine conditions without utilizing strong perturbates. These
parameters are crucial in utilizing biomolecules or employing nano-bio complexes to
develop fine-tuned functional surfaces/interfaces, which could be potentially characterized by an interface-sensitive label-free detection approach of sum frequency
generation vibrational spectroscopy (SFG-VS). It is capable of providing information of
only highly aligned molecular systems which are both IR- and Raman-active. Information
regarding structural composition, molecular interaction, kinetics, orientation, and impact
on neighboring environment can be explored simultaneously in one experimental
configuration itself at the interface. Hence, this work could provide a fresh look to the
existing knowledge related to biomolecular mechanism and nano-bio interactions, which
has yet not been explored fully in the SFG community itself. We have also extended our
studies on tensiometry, dynamic light scattering, zeta-potential, and ATR-FTIR
spectroscopy to gather information related to the bulk-features. We have characterized the
biomolecular adsorption and kinetics, molecularly-imprinted surfaces for BHb
recognition, complex interaction between two protein molecules with quantum dots, and
hydrophobically-modified organic nanoparticle behavior at interface and with dsDNA.
From the research work performed, we conclude that the interfacial directionality of
molecular groups is determined by the interplay of different intermolecular forces such as
electrostatic, van der Waals, and hydrogen bonding. These events decide the fine-tuning
of the interfacial properties and its dynamics. Our work could offer significant
contribution towards the rapidly growing domains of bio-mimicking systems, soft
functional materials, micro-fluidic device fabrications and biomolecular sensing
applications. Thus, it provides an exploratory research domain in the area of interfacial
science, which could be evaluated in a variety of experimental sets further. |
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