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Electron transport through two interacting channels in Azurin-based solid-state junctions.

Ping'an LiSudipta BeraShailendra Kumar-SaxenaIsrael PechtMordechai ShevesDavid CahenYoram Selzer
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2024)
The fundamental question of "what is the transport path of electrons through proteins?" initially introduced while studying long-range electron transfer between localized redox centers in proteins in vivo is also highly relevant to the transport properties of solid-state, dry metal-protein-metal junctions. Here, we report conductance measurements of such junctions, Au-( Azurin monolayer ensemble)-Bismuth (Bi) ones, with well-defined nanopore geometry and ~10 3 proteins/pore. Our results can be understood as follows. (1) Transport is via two interacting conducting channels, characterized by different spatial and time scales. The slow and spatially localized channel is associated with the Cu center of Azurin and the fast delocalized one with the protein's polypeptide matrix. Transport via the slow channel is by a sequential (noncoherent) process and in the second one by direct, off-resonant tunneling. (2) The two channels are capacitively coupled. Thus, with a change in charge occupation of the weakly coupled (metal center) channel, the broad energy level manifold, responsible for off-resonance tunneling, shifts, relative to the electrodes' Fermi levels. In this process, the off-resonance (fast) channel dominates transport, and the slow (redox) channel, while contributing only negligibly directly, significantly affects transport by intramolecular gating.
Keyphrases
  • solid state
  • electron transfer
  • single molecule
  • energy transfer
  • protein protein
  • small molecule
  • amino acid
  • binding protein
  • gold nanoparticles
  • mass spectrometry
  • capillary electrophoresis