| Literature DB >> 29462552 |
S Roy Chowdhury1, Jin Cao1, Yufan He1, H Peter Lu1.
Abstract
Manipulating protein conformations for exploring protein structure-function relationship has shown great promise. Although protein conformational changes under pulling force manipulation have been extensively studied, protein conformation changes under a compressive force have not been explored quantitatively. The latter is even more biologically significant and relevant in revealing protein functions in living cells associated with protein crowdedness, distribution fluctuations, and cell osmotic stress. Here we report our experimental observations on abrupt ruptures of protein native structures under compressive force, demonstrated and studied by single-molecule AFM-FRET spectroscopic nanoscopy. Our results show that the protein ruptures are abrupt and spontaneous events occurred when the compressive force reaches a threshold of 12-75 pN, a force amplitude accessible from thermal fluctuations in a living cell. The abrupt ruptures are sensitive to local environment, likely a general and important pathway of protein unfolding in living cells.Entities:
Keywords: atomic force microscope; pico-newton compressive force; single-molecule AFM-FRET nanoscopy; single-molecule force manipulation; spontaneous protein rupture; thermal energy fluctuation
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29462552 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.7b07934
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881