Literature DB >> 27210516

What controls open-pore and residual currents in the first sensing zone of alpha-hemolysin nanopore? Combined experimental and theoretical study.

Pablo M De Biase1, Eric N Ervin2, Prithwish Pal2, Olga Samoylova1, Suren Markosyan1, Michael G Keehan2, Geoffrey A Barrall2, Sergei Yu Noskov1.   

Abstract

The electrophoretic transport of single-stranded DNA through biological nanopores such as alpha-hemolysin (αHL) is a promising and cost-effective technology with the potential to revolutionize genomics. The rational design of pores with the controlled polymer translocation rates and high contrast between different nucleotides could improve significantly nanopore sequencing applications. Here, we apply a combination of theoretical and experimental methods in an attempt to elucidate several selective modifications in the pore which were proposed to be central for the effective discrimination between purines and pyrimidines. Our nanopore test set includes the wild type αHL and six mutants (E111N/M113X/K147N) in which the cross-section and chemical functionality of the first constriction zone of the pore are modified. Electrophysiological recordings were combined with all-atom Molecular Dynamics simulations (MD) and a recently developed Brownian Dynamics (BROMOC) protocol to investigate residual ion currents and pore-DNA interactions for two homo-polymers e.g. poly(dA)40 or poly(dC)40 blocking the pore. The calculated residual currents and contrast in the poly(dA)40/poly(dC)40 blocked pore are in qualitative agreement with the experimental recordings. We showed that a simple structural metric allows rationalization of key elements in the emergent contrast between purines and pyrimidines in the modified αHL mutants. The shape of the pore and its capacity for hydrogen bonding to a translocated polynucleotide are two essential parameters for contrast optimization. To further probe the impact of these two factors in the ssDNA sensing, we eliminated the effect of the primary constriction using serine substitutions (i.e. E111S/M113S/T145S/K147S) and increased the hydrophobic volume of the central residue in the secondary constriction (L135I). This pore modification sharply increased the contrast between Adenine (A) and Cytosine (C).

Entities:  

Year:  2016        PMID: 27210516     DOI: 10.1039/c6nr00164e

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nanoscale        ISSN: 2040-3364            Impact factor:   7.790


  3 in total

1.  Mapping Intrachannel Diffusive Dynamics of Interacting Molecules onto a Two-Site Model: Crossover in Flux Concentration Dependence.

Authors:  Alexander M Berezhkovskii; Sergey M Bezrukov
Journal:  J Phys Chem B       Date:  2018-06-29       Impact factor: 2.991

2.  The competing effects of core rigidity and linker flexibility in the nanoassembly of trivalent small molecule-DNA hybrids (SMDH3s)-a synergistic experimental-modeling study.

Authors:  Vincent Y Cho; Bong Jin Hong; Kevin L Kohlstedt; George C Schatz; SonBinh T Nguyen
Journal:  Nanoscale       Date:  2017-08-31       Impact factor: 7.790

3.  The Role of Lipid Interactions in Simulations of the α-Hemolysin Ion-Channel-Forming Toxin.

Authors:  Nicholas B Guros; Arvind Balijepalli; Jeffery B Klauda
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2018-09-18       Impact factor: 4.033

  3 in total

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