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Nanopore-Based Measurements of Protein Size, Fluctuations, and Conformational Changes.

Pradeep WadugeRui HuPrasad BandarkarHirohito YamazakiBenjamin CressiotQing ZhaoPaul C WhitfordMeni Wanunu
Published in: ACS nano (2017)
Proteins are structurally dynamic macromolecules, and it is challenging to quantify the conformational properties of their native state in solution. Nanopores can be efficient tools to study proteins in a solution environment. In this method, an electric field induces electrophoretic and/or electro-osmotic transport of protein molecules through a nanopore slightly larger than the protein molecule. High-bandwidth ion current measurement is used to detect the transit of each protein molecule. First, our measurements reveal a correlation between the mean current blockade amplitude and the radius of gyration for each protein. Next, we find a correlation between the shape of the current signal amplitude distributions and the protein fluctuation as obtained from molecular dynamics simulations. Further, the magnitude of the structural fluctuations, as probed by experiments and simulations, correlates with the ratio of α-helix to β-sheet content. We highlight the resolution of our measurements by resolving two states of calmodulin, a canonical protein that undergoes a conformational change in response to calcium binding.
Keyphrases
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • single molecule
  • protein protein
  • amino acid
  • binding protein
  • molecular dynamics
  • gene expression
  • dna binding
  • protein kinase
  • high speed