| Literature DB >> 27709780 |
Zhengyi Zhao1, Hui Zhang1, Dan Shu1, Carlo Montemagno2, Baoquan Ding3, Jingyuan Li4, Peixuan Guo1.
Abstract
The significance of bionanomotors in nanotechnology is analogous to mechanical motors in daily life. Here the principle and approach for designing and constructing biomimetic nanomotors with continuous single-directional motion are reported. This bionanomotor is composed of a dodecameric protein channel, a six-pRNA ring, and an ATPase hexamer. Based on recent elucidations of the one-way revolving mechanisms of the phi29 double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) motor, various RNA and protein elements are designed and tested by single-molecule imaging and biochemical assays, with which the motor with active components has been constructed. The motor motion direction is controlled by three operation elements: (1) Asymmetrical ATPase with ATP-interacting domains for alternative DNA binding/pushing regulated by an arginine finger in a sequential action manner. The arginine finger bridges two adjacent ATPase subunits into a non-covalent dimer, resulting in an asymmetrical hexameric complex containing one dimer and four monomers. (2) The dsDNA translocation channel as a one-way valve. (3) The hexameric pRNA ring geared with left-/right-handed loops. Assessments of these constructs reveal that one inactive subunit of pRNA/ATPase is sufficient to completely block motor function (defined as K = 1), implying that these components work sequentially based on the principle of binomial distribution and Yang Hui's triangle.Entities:
Keywords: bionanomotors; inter-subunit communication; one-way traffic; real-time recording; single-molecule imaging
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27709780 PMCID: PMC5217803 DOI: 10.1002/smll.201601600
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Small ISSN: 1613-6810 Impact factor: 13.281