Evidence of Cytolysin A nanopore incorporation in mammalian cells assessed by a graphical user interface.
Florian Leonardus Rudolfus LucasRocio K Finol-UrdanetaToon Van ThilloJeffrey R McArthurNieck Jordy van der HeideGiovanni MagliaPeter DedeckerOlaf StraussCarsten WlokaPublished in: Nanoscale (2023)
Technologies capable of assessing cellular metabolites with high precision and temporal resolution are currently limited. Recent developments in the field of nanopore sensors allow the non-stochastic quantification of metabolites, where a nanopore is acting as an electrical transducer for selective substrate binding proteins (SBPs). Here we show that incorporation of the pore-forming toxin Cytolysin A (ClyA) into the plasma membrane of Chinese hamster ovary cells (CHO-K1) results in the appearance of single-channel conductance amenable to multiplexed automated patch-clamp (APC) electrophysiology. In CHO-K1 cells, SBPs modify the ionic current flowing though ClyA nanopores, thus demonstrating its potential for metabolite sensing of living cells. Moreover, we developed a graphical user interface for the analysis of the complex signals resulting from multiplexed APC recordings. This system lays the foundation to bridge the gap between recent advances in the nanopore field ( e.g. , proteomic and transcriptomic) and potential cellular applications.