Unbiased Clustering of Molecular Dynamics for Spatially
Resolved Analysis of Chemically Heterogeneous Surfaces
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Abstract
A technique is described for resolving
and interpreting molecular
interactions with a chemically heterogeneous surface. Using total
internal reflection fluorescence microscopy, dynamic single molecule
trajectories were accumulated simultaneously for fluorescently labeled
fatty acid (interacting primarily via hydrophobic interactions) and
dextran (interacting via hydrogen-bonding interactions) probe molecules
at the interface between an aqueous solvent and a photopatterned solid
surface with distinct regions of amine-terminated and poly(ethylene
glycol) self-assembled monolayers. Using dynamic properties of the
probe molecules (adsorption rate, surface diffusion coefficient, residence
time), an unsupervised Gaussian mixture model algorithm was used to
identify areas of the surface that were chemically related to each
other, and the dynamic behaviors of the probe molecules were studied
statistically on these distinct regions. The dynamic data were compared
to data from homogeneous surfaces of known chemistry to provide a
chemical identification of each location on the surface. Spatial maps
were also constructed, allowing for spatial visualization of surface
chemistry on a hydrophilic substrate. This work enables the direct
study of interactions between single-molecule probes and distinct
surface chemistries, even in the presence of spatial heterogeneity,
without human bias, assumptions about surface structure, or model-dependent
analysis