4.8 Article

A Semi-Synthetic Ion Channel Platform for Detection of Phosphatase and Protease Activity

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 3, Issue 11, Pages 3567-3580

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn901231h

Keywords

gramicidin A; alkaline phosphatase (AP); planar lipid bilayers; ion channels; biosensors; enzyme activity; anthrax lethal factor (LF); biowarfare agent

Funding

  1. Hellman Faculty Fellowship
  2. UCSD Center for AIDS Research [NI-AID 5 P30 AI36214]
  3. National Science Foundation CAREER Award [CHE-0847530, 449088]
  4. UC TSR&TP graduate research fellowship
  5. California Space Grant Consortium graduate fellowship

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Sensitive methods to probe the activity of enzymes are important for clinical assays and for elucidating the role of these proteins in complex biochemical networks. This paper describes a semi-synthetic ion channel platform for detecting the activity of two different classes of enzymes with high sensitivity. In the first case, this method uses single ion channel conductance measurements to follow the enzyme-catalyzed hydrolysis of a phosphate group attached to the C-terminus of gramicidin A (gA, an ion channel-forming peptide) in the presence of alkaline phosphatase (AP). Enzymatic hydrolysis of this phosphate group removes negative charges from the entrance of the gA pore, resulting in a product with measurably reduced single ion channel conductance compared to the original gA-phosphate substrate. This technique employs a standard, commercial bilayer setup and takes advantage of the catalytic turnover of enzymes and the amplification characteristics of ion flux through individual gA pores to detect picomolar concentrations of active AP in solution. Furthermore, this technique makes it possible to study the kinetics of an enzyme and provides an estimate for the observed rate constant (k(cat)) and the Michaelis constant (K-M) by following the conversion of the gA-phosphate substrate to product over time in the presence of different concentrations of AP. In the second case, modification of gA with a substrate for proteolytic cleavage by anthrax lethal factor (LF) afforded a sensitive method for detection of LF activity, illustrating the utility of ion channel-based sensing for detection of a potential biowarfare agent. This ion channel-based platform represents a powerful, novel approach to monitor the activity of femtomoles to picomoles of two different (lasses of enzymes in solution. Furthermore, this platform has the potential for realizing miniaturized, cost-effective bioanalytical assays that complement currently established assays.

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