Single-molecule experiments in biological physics: methods and applications
F. Ritort

TL;DR
This review introduces single-molecule experiments in biological physics, highlighting recent technological advances, methodologies, and diverse applications in studying biomolecular processes, thermodynamics, and nonequilibrium systems.
Contribution
It provides an accessible overview of experimental techniques and their applications in biomolecular research, emphasizing recent developments and future directions.
Findings
SME techniques allow manipulation and measurement of individual molecules.
Applications include studying nucleic acids, proteins, and molecular motors.
SME offers insights into thermodynamics and fluctuation theorems in small systems.
Abstract
I review single-molecule experiments (SME) in biological physics. Recent technological developments have provided the tools to design and build scientific instruments of high enough sensitivity and precision to manipulate and visualize individual molecules and measure microscopic forces. Using SME it is possible to: manipulate molecules one at a time and measure distributions describing molecular properties; characterize the kinetics of biomolecular reactions and; detect molecular intermediates. SME provide the additional information about thermodynamics and kinetics of biomolecular processes. This complements information obtained in traditional bulk assays. In SME it is also possible to measure small energies and detect large Brownian deviations in biomolecular reactions, thereby offering new methods and systems to scrutinize the basic foundations of statistical mechanics. This review…
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