Publication | Closed Access
Downhill Protein Folding Modules as Scaffolds for Broad-Range Ultrafast Biosensors
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Citations
23
References
2012
Year
EngineeringProtein AssemblyMolecular BiologyAnalytical UltracentrifugationProtein RefoldingMolecular DynamicsSingle Molecule BiophysicsBiosensing SystemsProtein FoldingBroad-range Ultrafast BiosensorsConformational SwitchesSingle MoleculeReal-time BiosensorsComputational BiochemistryMacromolecular AssembliesBiophysicsMacromolecular MachineSingle-molecule DetectionBiomolecular EngineeringNatural SciencesProtein ModulesMolecular BiophysicsSmall Molecules
Conformational switches are macromolecules that toggle between two states (active/inactive or folded/unfolded) upon specific binding to a target molecule. These molecular devices provide an excellent scaffold for developing real-time biosensors. Here we take this concept one step beyond to build high-performance conformational rheostat sensors. The rationale is to develop sensors with expanded dynamic range and faster response time by coupling a given signal to the continuous (rather than binary) unfolding process of one-state downhill folding protein modules. As proof of concept we investigate the pH and ionic-strength sensing capabilities of the small α-helical protein BBL. Our results reveal that such a pH/ionic-strength sensor exhibits a linear response over 4 orders of magnitude in analyte concentration, compared to the 2 orders of magnitude for switches, and nearly concentration-independent microsecond response times.
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