4.8 Article

Bioengineering a Single-Protein Junction

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 139, Issue 43, Pages 15337-15346

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.7b06130

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Spanish MINECO [MDM-2014-0377, CTQ2015-71406-ERC, CTQ2015-64579-C3-3-P, CTQ2016-80066R, RYC-2011-07951, CSD2010-00024, F152014-53488-P, MAT2014-54484-P, MAT2014-58982-JIN]
  2. COST Action [MP1303]
  3. European Research Council (ERC) under European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation [681299]
  4. EU Commission (ERANET SynBio MODULIGHTOR Project)
  5. Catalan Government (CERCA Programme) [2014SGR-1251]
  6. Ramon Areces foundation
  7. European Regional Development Fund (ERDF)

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Bioelectronics moves toward designing nano scale electronic platforms that allow in vivo determinations. Such devices require interfacing complex biomolecular moieties as the sensing units to an electronic platform for signal transduction. Inevitably, a systematic design goes through a bottom-up understanding of the structurally related electrical signatures of the biomolecular circuit, which will ultimately lead us to tailor its electrical properties. Toward this aim, we show here the first example of bioengineered charge transport in a single-protein electrical contact. The results reveal that a single point-site mutation at the docking hydrophobic patch of a Cu-azurin causes minor structural distortion of the protein blue Cu site and a dramatic change in the charge transport regime of the single-protein contact, which goes from the classical Cu-mediated two-step transport in this system to a direct coherent tunneling. Our extensive spectroscopic studies and molecular-dynamics simulations show that the proteins' folding structures are preserved in the single-protein junction. The DFT-computed frontier orbital of the relevant protein segments suggests that the Cu center participation in each protein variant accounts for the different observed charge transport behavior. This work is a direct evidence of charge transport control in a protein backbone through external mutagenesis and a unique nanoscale platform to study structurally related biological electron transfer.

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