Chapter 6 – Forces 251
(Figure 6.11e) with nanopores consisting either of α-hemolysin or the photosensitive pro
tein bacteriorhodopsin. Bacteriorhodopsin is a cell membrane nanopore in bacteria, which
utilizes the absorbed energy from a single green wavelength photon of light to pump a single
proton across a phospholipid bilayer. This constitutes a small current, which the nanodroplet
arrangement can detect. Although it is possible to controllably implement such a system with
only one to two α-hemolysin complexes in each common phospholipid bilayer interface, the
number of bacteriorhodopsin molecules required to generate a measurable current is of the
order of thousands, but as a proof of principle, this shows great promise. Currently, most
nanodroplet arrangements are 2D, but there are recent developments toward implementing
more complex nanoscale biosynthetic systems in 3D. Although nanodroplet systems are
clearly not natively cellular, they represent a synthetic biological system that is moving in the
direction of an exceptionally cell-like physiological behavior.
6.6.5 ELECTROROTATION
An electric dipole can be induced on an electrically polarizable particle between
microelectrodes generating an electric field in a bespoke microscope flow cell (Figure 6.12a).
A suitable particle could include a latex microsphere that has been functionalized on its
surface with electrically charged chemical groups, such as negatively charged carboxyl or
amino groups that become protonated and hence positively charged in aqueous solution (see
Chapter 2). In a nonuniform electric field, there is a nonzero E-field gradient that imparts
a force on the particle in a direction parallel to the E-field gradient, termed “dielectrophor
esis” (Figure 6.12b), the same driving force of electrical molecular mobility used in gel
electrophoresis.
FIGURE 6.12 Electrorotation. (a) Microfabricated electrodes in quadrature using for
electrorotation. (Courtesy of Hywel Morgan, University of Southampton, Southampton, U.K.)
(b) Induced electrical dipole by dielectrophoresis. (c) Generation of torque during electrorotation
due to phase lag between direction of driving E-field and induced dipole in bead.