posted on 2020-02-11, 17:03authored byXin Li, Kuo Hao Lee, Spencer Shorkey, Jianhan Chen, Min Chen
Conformational changes
of proteins are essential to their functions.
Yet it remains challenging to measure the amplitudes and time scales
of protein motions. Here we show that the cytolysin A (ClyA) nanopore
was used as a molecular tweezer to trap a single maltose-binding protein
(MBP) within its lumen, which allows conformation changes to be monitored
as electrical current fluctuations in real time. In contrast to the
current two state binding model, the current measurements revealed
three distinct ligand-bound states for MBP in the presence of reducing
saccharides. Our analysis reveals that these three states represented
MBP bound to different isomers of reducing sugars. These findings contribute to the understanding of the mechanism of
substrate recognition by MBP and illustrate that the nanopore tweezer
is a powerful, label-free, single-molecule approach for studying protein
conformational dynamics under functional conditions.