Description
My research focuses on studying the interaction between spatiotemporally encoded electric field (EF) and living cells and biomolecules. In this thesis, I report two projects that I have been working on to address these questions. My first project studies the EF modulation of the extracellular-signal-regulated kinase (ERK) pathway. I demonstrated modulation of ERK activities using alternative current (AC) EFs in a new frequency range applied through high-k dielectric passivated microelectrodes with single-cell resolution without electrochemical process induced by the EF stimulation. Further experiments pinpointed a mechanism of phosphorylation site of epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor to activate the EGFR-ERK pathway that is independent of EGF. AC EFs provide a new strategy to precisely control the dynamics of ERK activation, which may serve as a powerful platform for control of cell behaviors with implications in wide range of biomedical applications.
In the second project, I used solid-state nanopore system as the base platform for single molecule experiments, and developed a scalable bottom-up process to construct planar nanopore devices with self-aligned transverse tunneling junctions, all embedded on a nanofluidic chip, based on feedback-controlled reversible electrochemical deposition in a confined nanoscale space. I demonstrated the first simultaneous detection of translocating DNA molecules from both the ionic channel and the tunneling junction with very high yield. Meanwhile, the signal amplitudes from the tunneling junction are unexpectedly high, indicating that these signals are probably dominated by transient currents associated with the fast motion of charged molecules between the transverse electrodes. This new platform provides the flexibility and reproducibility required to study quantum-tunneling-based DNA detection and sequencing.
In summary, I have developed two platforms that engineer heterogenous EF at different length scales to modulate live cells and single biomolecules. My results suggest that the charges and dipoles of biomolecules can be electrostatically manipulated to regulate physiological responses and to push detection resolution to single molecule level. Nevertheless, there are still many interesting questions remain, such as the molecular mechanism of EF-protein interaction and tunneling signal extraction. These will be the topics for future investigations.
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Details
Title
- Electrostatic Modulation of Biological Systems: From Cells to Molecules
Contributors
- Wang, Yuan (Author)
- Qing, Quan (Thesis advisor)
- Lindsay, Stuart (Committee member)
- Wang, Shaopeng (Committee member)
- Ros, Robert (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2021
Subjects
Resource Type
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Note
- Partial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2021
- Field of study: Physics