Internal Hydration Properties of Single Bacterial Endospores Probed by Electrostatic Force Microscopy

Marc Van Der Hofstadt, Rene Fabregas, Ruben Millan-Solsona, Antonio Juarez, Laura Fumagalli, Gabriel Gomila

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

21 Scopus citations

Abstract

We show that the internal hydration properties of single Bacillus cereus endospores in air under different relative humidity (RH) conditions can be determined through the measurement of its electric permittivity by means of quantitative electrostatic force microscopy (EFM). We show that an increase in the RH from 0% to 80% induces a large increase in the equivalent homogeneous relative electric permittivity of the bacterial endospores, from ∼4 up to ∼17, accompanied only by a small increase in the endospore height, of just a few nanometers. These results correlate the increase of the moisture content of the endospore with the corresponding increase of environmental RH. Three-dimensional finite element numerical calculations, which include the internal structure of the endospores, indicate that the moisture is mainly accumulated in the external layers of the endospore, hence preserving the core of the endospore at low hydration levels. This mechanism is different from what we observe for vegetative bacterial cells of the same species, in which the cell wall at high humid atmospheric conditions is not able to preserve the cytoplasmic region at low hydration levels. These results show the potential of quantitative EFM under environmental humidity control to study the hygroscopic properties of small-scale biological (and nonbiological) entities and to determine its internal hydration state. A better understanding of nanohygroscopic properties can be of relevance in the study of essential biological processes and in the design of bionanotechnological applications.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)11327-11336
Number of pages10
JournalACS Nano
Volume10
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 27 2016

Funding

This work has been partially supported by the Nanomicrowave project funded from the European Union Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/People-2012-ITN) under grant agreement no. 317116.EU and also by the Spanish projects TEC2013-48344-C2 and BIO2013-49148-C2-1R. G.G. acknowledges support from an ICREA Academia grant from the Generalitat de Catalunya. We acknowledge M. C. Biagi from IBEC for technical support and J. M. Rebled from the CCiT-UB for transmission electron microscopy images.

Keywords

  • bacterial endospores
  • electric permittivity
  • electrostatic force microscopy
  • nanohygroscopicity
  • relative humidity

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