nn8b09266_si_004.mpg (13.94 MB)
Download fileElectro-Mechanical Conductance Modulation of a Nanopore Using a Removable Gate
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posted on 2019-02-04, 00:00 authored by Shidi Zhao, Laura Restrepo-Pérez, Misha Soskine, Giovanni Maglia, Chirlmin Joo, Cees Dekker, Aleksei AksimentievIon
channels form the basis of information processing in living
cells by facilitating the exchange of electrical signals across and
along cellular membranes. Applying the same principles to man-made
systems requires the development of synthetic ion channels that can
alter their conductance in response to a variety of external manipulations.
By combining single-molecule electrical recordings with all-atom molecular
dynamics simulations, we here demonstrate a hybrid nanopore system
that allows for both a stepwise change of its conductance and a nonlinear
current–voltage dependence. The conductance modulation is realized
by using a short flexible peptide gate that carries opposite electric
charge at its ends. We show that a constant transmembrane bias can
position (and, in a later stage, remove) the peptide gate right at
the most-sensitive sensing region of a biological nanopore FraC, thus
partially blocking its channel and producing a stepwise change in
the conductance. Increasing or decreasing the bias while having the
peptide gate trapped in the pore stretches or compresses the peptide
within the nanopore, thus modulating its conductance in a nonlinear
but reproducible manner. We envision a range of applications of this
removable-gate nanopore system, e.g. from an element
of biological computing circuits to a test bed for probing the elasticity
of intrinsically disordered proteins.