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Structural Flexibility and Disassembly Kinetics of Single Ferritin Molecules Using Optical Nanotweezers.

Arman YousefiZe ZhengSaaman ZargarbashiMahya AssadipapariGraham J HickmanChristopher D J ParmenterCarlos J Bueno-AlejoGabriel SandersonDominic CraskeLei XuCarole C PerryMohsen RahmaniCuifeng Ying
Published in: ACS nano (2024)
Ferritin, a spherical protein shell assembled from 24 subunits, functions as an efficient iron storage and release system through its channels. Understanding how various chemicals affect the structural behavior of ferritin is crucial for unravelling the origins of iron-related diseases in living organisms including humans. In particular, the influence of chemicals on ferritin's dynamics and iron release is barely explored at the single-protein level. Here, by employing optical nanotweezers using double-nanohole (DNH) structures, we examined the effect of ascorbic acid (reducing reagent) and pH on individual ferritin's conformational dynamics. The dynamics of ferritin increased as the concentration of ascorbic acid approached saturation. At pH 2.0, ferritin exhibited significant structural fluctuations and eventually underwent a stepwise disassembly into fragments. This work demonstrated the disassembly pathway and kinetics of a single ferritin molecule in solution. We identified four critical fragments during its disassembly pathway, which are 22-mer, 12-mer, tetramer, and dimer subunits. Moreover, we present single-molecule evidence of the cooperative disassembly of ferritin. Interrogating ferritin's structural change in response to different chemicals holds importance for understanding their roles in iron metabolism, hence facilitating further development of medical treatments for its associated diseases.
Keyphrases
  • iron deficiency
  • single molecule
  • binding protein
  • small molecule
  • mass spectrometry
  • amino acid
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • living cells
  • atomic force microscopy