4.8 Article

The Molecular Basis for Binding of an Electron Transfer Protein to a Metal Oxide Surface

期刊

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
卷 139, 期 36, 页码 12647-12654

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AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.7b06560

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资金

  1. Laboratory Directed Research and Development Program of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory at the Molecular Foundry
  2. Advanced Light Source
  3. Joint BioEnergy Institute
  4. Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences and Office of Biological and Environmental Research, of the U.S. Department of Energy [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  5. Office of Naval Research [N000141310551]

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Achieving fast electron transfer between a material and protein is a long-standing challenge confronting applications in bioelectronics, bioelectrocatalysis, and optobioelectronics. Interestingly, naturally occurring extracellular electron transfer proteins bind to and reduce metal oxides fast enough to enable cell growth, and thus could offer insight into solving this coupling problem. While structures of several extracellular electron transfer proteins are known, an understanding of how these proteins bind to their metal oxide substrates has remained elusive because this abiotic-biotic interface is inaccessible to traditional structural methods. Here, we use advanced footprinting techniques to investigate binding between the Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 extracellular electron transfer protein MtrF and one of its substrates, alpha-Fe2O3 nanoparticles, at the molecular level. We find that MtrF binds alpha-Fe2O3 specifically, but not tightly. Nanoparticle binding does not induce significant conformational changes in MtrF, but instead protects specific residues on the face of MtrF likely to be involved in electron transfer. Surprisingly, these residues are separated in primary sequence, but cluster into a small 3D putative binding site. This binding site is located near a local pocket of positive charge that is complementary to the negatively charged alpha-Fe2O3 surface, and mutational analysis indicates that electrostatic interactions in this 3D pocket modulate MtrF-nanoparticle binding. Strikingly, these results show that binding of MtrF to alpha-Fe2O3 follows a strategy to connect proteins to materials that resembles the binding between donor-acceptor electron transfer proteins. Thus, by developing a new methodology to probe protein-nanoparticle binding at the molecular level, this work reveals one of nature's strategies for achieving fast, efficient electron transfer between proteins and materials.

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