Rosette Nanotube Porins as Ion Selective Transporters and Single-Molecule Sensors.
Prabhat TripathiLiang ShuaiHimanshu JoshiHirohito YamazakiWilliam H FowleAleksei AksimentievHicham FenniriMeni WanunuPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2020)
Rosette nanotubes (RNTs) are a class of materials formed by molecular self-assembly of a fused guanine-cytosine base (G∧C base). An important feature of these self-assembled nanotubes is their precise atomic structure, intriguing for rational design and optimization as synthetic transmembrane porins. Here, we present experimental observations of ion transport across 1.1 nm inner diameter RNT porins (RNTPs) of various lengths in the range 5-200 nm. In a typical experiment, custom lipophilic RNTPs were first inserted into lipid vesicles; the vesicles then spontaneously fused with a planar lipid bilayer, which produced stepwise increases of ion current across the bilayer. Our measurements in 1 M KCl solution indicate ion transport rates of ∼50 ions s-1 V-1 m, which for short channels amounts to conductance values of ∼1 nS, commensurate with naturally occurring toxin channels such as α-hemolysin. Measurements of interaction times of α-cyclodextrin with RNTPs reveal two distinct unbinding time scales, which suggest that interactions of either face of α-cyclodextrin with the RNTP face are differentiable, backed with all-atom molecular dynamics simulations. Our results highlight the potential of RNTPs as self-assembled nonproteinaceous single-molecule sensors and selective nanofilters with tunable functionality through chemistry.
Keyphrases
- single molecule
- molecular dynamics simulations
- living cells
- atomic force microscopy
- escherichia coli
- photodynamic therapy
- ionic liquid
- low cost
- molecular docking
- fatty acid
- genome wide
- deep learning
- gene expression
- mass spectrometry
- capillary electrophoresis
- quantum dots
- human health
- dengue virus
- drug discovery
- aqueous solution