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Heavy Water Reduces the Electronic Conductance of Protein Wires via Deuteron Interactions with Aromatic Residues.

Sepideh AfsariSohini MukherjeeNicholas HalloranGiovanna GhirlandaEathen RyanXu WangStuart Lindsay
Published in: Nano letters (2023)
Proteins are versatile, self-assembling nanoelectronic components, but their hopping conductivity is expected to be influenced by solvent fluctuations. The role of the solvent was investigated by measuring the single molecule conductance of several proteins in both H 2 O and D 2 O. The conductance of a homologous series of protein wires decreases more rapidly with length in D 2 O, indicating a 6-fold decrease in carrier diffusion constant relative to the same protein in H 2 O. The effect was found to depend on the specific aromatic amino acid composition. A tryptophan zipper protein showed a decrease in conductance similar to that of the protein wires, whereas a phenylalanine zipper protein was insensitive to solvent changes. Tryptophan contains an indole amine, whereas the phenylalanine aromatic ring has no exchangeable protons, so the effect of heavy water on conductance is a consequence of specific D- or H-interactions with the aromatic residues.
Keyphrases
  • amino acid
  • single molecule
  • protein protein
  • binding protein
  • ionic liquid
  • dna damage
  • dna repair