Facilitated translocation of polypeptides through a protein pore is a ubiquitous and fundamental process in biology. Several translocation systems possess various well-defined binding sites within the pore lumen, but a clear mechanistic understanding of how the interaction of the polypeptides with the binding site alters the underlying kinetics is still missing. Here, we employed rational protein design and single-channel electrical recordings to obtain detailed kinetic signatures of polypeptide translocation through the staphylococcal alpha-hemolysin (alphaHL) transmembrane pore, a robust, tractable, and versatile beta-barrel protein. Acidic binding sites composed of rings of negatively charged aspartic acid residues, engineered at strategic positions within the beta barrel, produced dramatic changes in the functional properties of the alphaHL protein, facilitating the transport of cationic polypeptides from one side of the membrane to the other. When two electrostatic binding sites were introduced, at the entry and exit of the beta barrel, both the rate constants of association and dissociation increased substantially, diminishing the free energy barrier for translocation. By contrast, more hydrophobic polypeptides exhibited a considerable decrease in the rate constant of association to the pore lumen, having to overcome a greater energetic barrier because of the hydrophilic nature of the pore interior.
One intimidating challenge in protein nanopore-based technologies is designing robust protein scaffolds that remain functionally intact under a broad spectrum of detection conditions. Here, we show that an extensively engineered bacterial ferric hydroxamate uptake component A (FhuA), a β-barrel membrane protein, functions as a robust protein tunnel for the sampling of biomolecular events. The key implementation in this work was the coupling of direct genetic engineering with a refolding approach to produce an unusually stable protein nanopore. More importantly, this nanostructure maintained its stability under many experimental circumstances, some of which, including low ion concentration and highly acidic aqueous phase, are normally employed to gate, destabilize or unfold β-barrel membrane proteins. To demonstrate these advantageous traits, we show that the engineered FhuA-based protein nanopore functioned as a sensing element for examining the proteolytic activity of an enzyme at highly acidic pH and for determining the kinetics of protein-DNA aptamer interactions at physiological salt concentration.
Protein-protein pore interaction is a fundamental and ubiquitous process in biology and medical biotechnology. Here, we employed high-resolution time-resolved single-channel electrical recording along with protein engineering to examine a protein-protein pore interaction at single-molecule resolution. The pore was formed by Staphylococcus aureus alpha-hemolysin (alphaHL) protein and contained electrostatic traps formed by rings of seven aspartic acid residues placed at two different positions within the pore lumen. The protein analytes were positively charged presequences (pb2) of varying length fused to the small ribonuclease barnase (Ba). The presence of the electrostatic traps greatly enhanced the interaction of the pb2-Ba protein with the alphaHL protein pore. This study demonstrates the high sensitivity of the nanopore technique to an array of factors that govern the protein-protein pore interaction, including the length of the pb2 presequence, the position of the electrostatic traps within the pore lumen, the ionic strength of the aqueous phase, and the transmembrane potential. Alterations in the functional properties of the pb2-Ba protein and the alphaHL protein pore and systematic changes of the experimental parameters revealed the balance between forces driving the pb2-Ba protein into the pore and forces driving it out.
OprD proteins form a large family of substrate-specific outer-membrane channels in Gram-negative bacteria. We report here the X-ray crystal structure of OprD from Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which reveals a monomeric 18-stranded beta-barrel characterized by a very narrow pore constriction, with a positively charged basic ladder on one side and an electronegative pocket on the other side. The location of highly conserved residues in OprD suggests that the structure represents the general architecture of OprD channels.
Despite its fundamental and critical importance in molecular biology and practical medical biotechnology, how a polypeptide interacts with a transmembrane protein pore is not yet comprehensively understood. Here, we employed single-channel electrical recordings to reveal the interactions of short polypeptides and small folded proteins with a robust beta-barrel protein pore. The short polypeptides were approximately 25 residues in length, resembling positively charged targeting presequences involved in protein import. The proteins were consisted of positively charged pre-cytochrome b2 fragments (pb2) fused to the small ribonuclease barnase (approximately 110 residues, Ba). Single-molecule experiments exploring the interaction of a folded pb2-Ba protein with a single beta-barrel pore, which contained negatively charged electrostatic traps, revealed the complexity of a network of intermolecular forces, including driving and electrostatic ones. In addition, the interaction was dependent on other factors, such as the hydrophobic content of the interacting polypeptide, the location of the electrostatic trap, the length of the pb2 presequence and temperature. This single-molecule approach together with protein design of either the interacting polypeptide or the pore lumen opens new opportunities for the exploration of the polypeptide-pore interaction at high temporal resolution. Such future studies are also expected to unravel the advantages and limitations of the nanopore technique for the detection and exploration of individual polypeptides.
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