TY - JOUR
T1 - Micro- and nanofabrication processes for hybrid synthetic and biological system fabrication
AU - Verma, Vivek
AU - Hancock, William O.
AU - Catchmark, Jeffrey M.
N1 - Funding Information:
He is an Assistant Professor of Bioengineering at Pennsylvania State University (Penn State), Univer-sity Park, and Motors Thrust Leader in the Penn State Center for Nanoscals Science, a Materials Research Science and Engineering Center funded by the National Science Foundation.
Funding Information:
Manuscript received November 19, 2004; revised June 13, 2005. This work was supported in part by The Pennsylvania State University Center for Nanoscale Science, a National Science Foundation Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (DMR0213623) and in part by the National Nanotechnology Infrastructure Network (NSF Cooperative Agreement 0335765 with Cornell University) and The Pennsylvania State University Materials Research Institute.
PY - 2005/11
Y1 - 2005/11
N2 - The application of micro- and nanofabrication processes to the development of hybrid synthetic and biological systems may enable the production of new devices such as controllable transporters, gears, levers, micropumps, or micro-generators powered by biological molecular motors. However, engineering these hybrid devices requires fabrication processes that are compatible with biological materials such as kinesin motor proteins and microtubules. In this paper, the effects of micro- and nanofabrication processing chemicals and resists on the functionality of casein, kinesin, and microtubule proteins are systematically examined to address the important missing link of the biocompatibility of micro- and nanofabrication processes needed to realize hybrid system fabrication. It is found that both casein, which is used to prevent motor denaturation on surfaces, and kinesin motors are surprisingly tolerant of most of the processing chemicals examined. Microtubules, however, are much more sensitive. Exposure to the processing chemicals leads to depolymerization, which is partially attributed to the pH of the solutions examined. When the chemicals were diluted in aqueous buffers, a subset of them no longer depolymerized microtubules and in their diluted forms still worked as resist removers. This approach broadens the application of micro- and nanofabrication processes to hybrid synthetic and biological system fabrication.
AB - The application of micro- and nanofabrication processes to the development of hybrid synthetic and biological systems may enable the production of new devices such as controllable transporters, gears, levers, micropumps, or micro-generators powered by biological molecular motors. However, engineering these hybrid devices requires fabrication processes that are compatible with biological materials such as kinesin motor proteins and microtubules. In this paper, the effects of micro- and nanofabrication processing chemicals and resists on the functionality of casein, kinesin, and microtubule proteins are systematically examined to address the important missing link of the biocompatibility of micro- and nanofabrication processes needed to realize hybrid system fabrication. It is found that both casein, which is used to prevent motor denaturation on surfaces, and kinesin motors are surprisingly tolerant of most of the processing chemicals examined. Microtubules, however, are much more sensitive. Exposure to the processing chemicals leads to depolymerization, which is partially attributed to the pH of the solutions examined. When the chemicals were diluted in aqueous buffers, a subset of them no longer depolymerized microtubules and in their diluted forms still worked as resist removers. This approach broadens the application of micro- and nanofabrication processes to hybrid synthetic and biological system fabrication.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/28444464489
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/28444464489#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1109/TADVP.2005.858302
DO - 10.1109/TADVP.2005.858302
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:28444464489
SN - 1521-3323
VL - 28
SP - 584
EP - 593
JO - IEEE Transactions on Advanced Packaging
JF - IEEE Transactions on Advanced Packaging
IS - 4
ER -