sb5b00037_si_001.pdf (2.18 MB)
Download fileInfluence of Electrostatics on Small Molecule Flux through a Protein Nanoreactor
journal contribution
posted on 2015-09-18, 00:00 authored by Jeff E. Glasgow, Michael
A. Asensio, Christopher M. Jakobson, Matthew B. Francis, Danielle Tullman-ErcekNature
uses protein compartmentalization to great effect for control
over enzymatic pathways, and the strategy has great promise for synthetic
biology. In particular, encapsulation in nanometer-sized containers
to create nanoreactors has the potential to elicit interesting, unexplored
effects resulting from deviations from well-understood bulk processes.
Self-assembled protein shells for encapsulation are especially desirable
for their uniform structures and ease of perturbation through genetic
mutation. Here, we use the MS2 capsid, a well-defined porous 27 nm
protein shell, as an enzymatic nanoreactor to explore pore-structure
effects on substrate and product flux during the catalyzed reaction.
Our results suggest that the shell can influence the enzymatic reaction
based on charge repulsion between small molecules and point mutations
around the pore structure. These findings also lend support to the
hypothesis that protein compartments modulate the transport of small
molecules and thus influence metabolic reactions and catalysis in vitro.