Login / Signup

Sculpting conducting nanopore size and shape through de novo protein design.

Samuel BerhanuSagardip MajumderThomas MüntenerJames WhitehouseCarolin BernerAsim K BeraAlex KangBinyong LiangG Nasir KhanBanumathi SankaranLukas K TammDavid J BrockwellSebastian HillerSheena E RadfordJulien S BakerAnastassia Andreevna Vorobieva
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2024)
Transmembrane β-barrels have considerable potential for a broad range of sensing applications. Current engineering approaches for nanopore sensors are limited to naturally occurring channels, which provide suboptimal starting points. By contrast, de novo protein design can in principle create an unlimited number of new nanopores with any desired properties. Here we describe a general approach to designing transmembrane β-barrel pores with different diameters and pore geometries. Nuclear magnetic resonance and crystallographic characterization show that the designs are stably folded with structures resembling those of the design models. The designs have distinct conductances that correlate with their pore diameter, ranging from 110 picosiemens (~0.5 nanometer pore diameter) to 430 picosiemens (~1.1 nanometer pore diameter). Our approach opens the door to the custom design of transmembrane nanopores for sensing and sequencing applications.
Keyphrases
  • magnetic resonance
  • single molecule
  • solid state
  • optic nerve
  • protein protein
  • high resolution
  • amino acid
  • binding protein
  • contrast enhanced
  • small molecule
  • low cost