posted on 2022-08-25, 19:43authored byTobias Ensslen, Kumar Sarthak, Aleksei Aksimentiev, Jan C. Behrends
The chemical nature and precise position of posttranslational
modifications
(PTMs) in proteins or peptides are crucial for various severe diseases,
such as cancer. State-of-the-art PTM diagnosis is based on elaborate
and costly mass-spectrometry or immunoassay-based approaches, which
are limited in selectivity and specificity. Here, we demonstrate the
use of a protein nanopore to differentiate peptidesderived
from human histone H4 proteinof identical mass according to
the positions of acetylated and methylated lysine residues. Unlike
sequencing by stepwise threading, our method detects PTMs and their
positions by sensing the shape of a fully entrapped peptide, thus
eliminating the need for controlled translocation. Molecular dynamics
simulations show that the sensitivity to molecular shape derives from
a highly nonuniform electric field along the pore. This molecular
shape-sensing principle offers a path to versatile, label-free, and
high-throughput characterizations of protein isoforms.