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Alignment of biological microparticles by a polarized laser beam
Authors:Győző Garab  Péter Galajda  István Pomozi  Laura Finzi  Tünde Praznovszky  Pál Ormos  Herbert van Amerongen
Institution:(1) Institute of Plant Biology, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, P.O. Box 521, 6701 Szeged, Hungary;(2) Institute of Biophysics and Institute of Genetics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, P.O. Box 521, 6701 Szeged, Hungary;(3) Biological Research Center, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, P.O. Box 521, 6701 Szeged, Hungary;(4) Dipartimento di Biologia e Centro Interdipartimentale Materiali e Interfacce Nanostrutturate (CIMAINA), University of Milan, Milan, Italy;(5) Department of Biophysics and Physics of Complex Systems, Division of Physics and Astronomy Faculty of Sciences, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, De Boelelaan 1087, 1081, HV, Amsterdam, The Netherlands;(6) Laboratory of Biophysics, Department of Agrotechnology and Food Sciences, Wageningen University, Dreijenlaan 3, 6703, HA, Wageningen, The Netherlands
Abstract:The optical alignment of biological samples is of great relevance to microspectrometry and to the micromanipulation of single particles. Recently, Bayoudh et al. (J. Mod. Opt. 50:1581–1590, 2003) have shown that isolated, disk-shaped chloroplasts can be aligned in a controlled manner using an in-plane-polarized Gaussian beam trap, and suggested that this is due to their nonspherical shape. Here we demonstrate that the orientation of various micrometer-sized isolated biological particles, trapped by optical tweezers, can be altered in a controlled way by changing the plane of linear polarization of the tweezers. In addition to chloroplasts, we show that subchloroplast particles of small size and irregular overall shape, aggregated photosynthetic light-harvesting protein complexes as well as chromosomes can be oriented with the linearly polarized beam of the tweezers. By using a laser scanning confocal microscope equipped with a differential polarization attachment, we also measured the birefringence of magnetically oriented granal chloroplasts, and found that they exhibit strong birefringence with large local variations, which appears to originate from stacked membranes. The size and sign of the birefringence are such that the resulting anisotropic interaction with the linearly polarized laser beam significantly contributes to the torque orienting the chloroplasts.
Keywords:Birefringence  Chloroplast  Chromosome  Laser tweezers  Optical alignment
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