Hierarchical and Helical Self-Assembly of ADP-Ribosyl Cyclase into Large-Scale Protein Microtubes
Posted on 2008-11-27 - 00:00
Proteins are macromolecules with characteristic structures and biological functions. It is extremely challenging to obtain protein microtube structures through self-assembly as proteins are very complex and flexible. Here we present a strategy showing how a specific protein, ADP-ribosyl cyclase, helically self-assembles from monomers into hexagonal nanochains and further to highly ordered crystalline microtubes. The structures of protein nanochains and consequently self-assembled superlattice were determined by X-ray crystallography at 4.5 Å resolution and imaged by scanning electron microscopy. The protein initially forms into dimers that have a fixed size of 5.6 nm, and then, helically self-assembles into 35.6 nm long hexagonal nanochains. One such nanochain consists of six dimers (12 monomers) that stack in order by a pseudo P61 screw axis. Seven nanochains produce a series of large-scale assemblies, nanorods, forming the building blocks for microrods. A proposed aging process of microrods results in the formation of hollow microstructures. Synthesis and characterization of large scale self-assembled protein microtubes may pave a new pathway, capable of not only understanding the self-assembly dynamics of biological materials, but also directing design and fabrication of multifunctional nanobuilding blocks with particular applications in biomedical engineering.
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Liu, Qun; Kriksunov, Irina A.; Wang, Zhongwu; Graeff, Richard; Lee, Hon Cheung; Hao, Quan (2016). Hierarchical and Helical Self-Assembly of ADP-Ribosyl Cyclase into Large-Scale Protein Microtubes. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jp807990g