Control of the conductance of engineered protein nanopores through concerted loop motions

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2014 Jun 2;53(23):5897-902. doi: 10.1002/anie.201400400. Epub 2014 Apr 28.

Abstract

Protein nanopores have attracted much interest for nucleic acid sequencing, chemical sensing, and protein folding at the single molecule level. The outer membrane protein OmpG from E. coli stands out because it forms a nanopore from a single polypeptide chain. This property allows the separate engineering of each of the seven extracellular loops that control access to the pore. The longest of these loops, loop 6, has been recognized as the main gating loop that closes the pore at low pH values and opens it at high pH values. A method was devised to pin each of the loops to the embedding membrane and measure the single-pore conductances of the resulting constructs. The electrophysiological and complementary NMR measurements show that the pinning of individual loops alters the structure and dynamics of neighboring and distant loops in a correlated fashion. Pinning loop 6 generates a constitutively open pore and patterns of concerted loop motions control access to the OmpG nanopore.

Keywords: NMR spectroscopy; electrophysiology; porins; protein engineering; protein nanopores.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Membrane Proteins / metabolism*
  • Nanopores*
  • Protein Engineering / methods*

Substances

  • Membrane Proteins