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Photothermally Heated Asymmetric Thin Nanopores Suggest the Influence of Temperature on the Intermediate Conformational State of Cytochrome c in an Electric Field.

Hirohito YamazakiTakuya MabuchiKouta KaitoKyosuke MatsudaHiromu KatoSotaro Uemura
Published in: Nano letters (2024)
Nanopore sensing is a label-free single-molecule technique that enables the study of the dynamical structural properties of proteins. Here, we detect the translocation of cytochrome c (Cyt c ) through an asymmetric thin nanopore with photothermal heating to evaluate the influence of temperature on Cyt c conformation during its translocation in an electric field. Before Cyt c translocates through an asymmetric thin SiN x nanopore, ∼1 ms trapping events occur due to electric field-induced denaturation. These trapping events were corroborated by a control analysis with a transmission electron microscopy-drilled pore and denaturant buffer. Cyt c translocation events exhibited markedly greater broad current blockade when the pores were photothermally heated. Collectively, our molecular dynamics simulation predicted that an increased temperature facilitates denaturation of the α-helical structure of Cyt c , resulting in greater blockade current during Cyt c trapping. Our photothermal heating method can be used to study the influence of temperature on protein conformation at the single-molecule level in a label-free manner.
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