We introduce a two-dimensional method for mass spectrometry in solution that is based on the interaction between a nanometer-scale pore and analytes. As an example, poly(ethylene glycol) molecules that enter a single ␣-hemolysin pore cause distinct mass-dependent conductance states with characteristic mean residence times. The conductance-based mass spectrum clearly resolves the repeat unit of ethylene glycol, and the mean residence time increases monotonically with the poly(ethylene glycol) mass. This technique could prove useful for the real-time characterization of molecules in solution.Gaussian mixture model ͉ poly(ethylene glycol) ͉ ␣-hemolysin ͉ ion channel ͉ maximum likelihood signal classification
The capture and release of single poly(ethylene glycol) molecules by the alpha-Hemolysin pore are observed as time-resolved reversible steps in ion conductance. The capture on rate, inferred from the step frequency, decreases monotonically with polymer size. However, the polymer residence time shows a crossover behavior, first increasing and then decreasing with molecular weight. Our interpretation is that, in the case of polymers which are too large to be accommodated within the pore, the out-of-the-pore part of the molecule pulls on the trapped part, thus acting as an entropic spring.
Asymmetrical (one-sided) application of penetrating water-soluble polymers, polyethylene glycols (PEGs), to a well-defined channel formed by Staphylococcus aureus alpha-toxin is shown to probe channel pore geometry in more detail than their symmetrical (two-sided) application. Polymers added to the cis side of the planar lipid membrane (the side of protein addition) affect channel conductance differently than polymers added to the trans side. Because a satisfactory theory quantitatively describing PEG partitioning into a channel pore does not exist, we apply the simple empirical rules proposed previously (, J. Membr. Biol. 161:83-92) to gauge the size of pore openings as well as the size and position of constrictions along the pore axis. We estimate the radii of the two openings of the channel to be practically identical and equal to 1. 2-1.3 nm. Two apparent constrictions with radii of approximately 0. 9 nm and approximately 0.6-0.7 nm are inferred to be present in the channel lumen, the larger one being closer to the cis side. These structural findings agree well with crystallographic data on the channel structure (, Science. 274:1859-1866) and verify the practicality of polymer probing. The general features of PEG partitioning are examined using available theoretical considerations, assuming there is no attraction between PEG and the channel lumen. It is shown that the sharp dependence of the partition coefficient on polymer molecular weight found under both symmetrical and asymmetrical polymer application can be rationalized within a "hard sphere nonideal solution model." This finding is rather surprising because PEG forms highly flexible coils in water with a Kuhn length of only several Angstroms.
The mechanisms of KCl-induced enhancement in identification of individual molecules of poly(ethylene glycol) using solitary alpha-hemolysin nanoscale pores are described. The interaction of single molecules with the nanopore causes changes in the ionic current flowing through the pore. We show that the on-rate constant of the process is several hundred times larger and that the off-rate is several hundred times smaller in 4 M KCl than in 1 M KCl. These shifts dramatically improve detection and make single molecule identification feasible. KCl also changes the solubility of poly(ethylene glycol) by the same order of magnitude as it changes the rate constants. In addition, the polymer-nanopore interaction is determined to be a strong non-monotonic function of voltage, indicating that the flexible, nonionic poly(ethylene glycol) acts as a charged molecule. Therefore, salting-out and Coulombic interactions are responsible for the KCl-induced enhancement. These results will advance the development of devices with sensor elements based on single nanopores.
Closing linear poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) into a circular "crown" dramatically changes its dynamics in the alpha-hemolysin channel. In the electrically neutral crown ether (C2H4O)6, six ethylene oxide monomers are linked into a circle that gives the molecule ion-complexing capacity and increases its rigidity. As with linear PEG, addition of the crown to the membrane-bathing solution decreases the ionic conductance of the channel and generates additional conductance noise. However, in contrast to linear PEG, both the conductance reduction (reporting on crown partitioning into the channel pore) and the noise (reporting on crown dynamics in the pore) now depend on voltage strongly and nonmonotonically. Within the whole frequency range accessible in channel reconstitution experiments, the noise power spectrum is "white", showing that crown exchange between the channel and the bulk solution is fast. Analyzing these data in the framework of a Markovian two-state model, we are able to characterize the process quantitatively. We show that the lifetime of the crown in the channel reaches its maximum (a few microseconds) at about the same voltage (approximately 100 mV, negative from the side of protein addition) where the crown's reduction of the channel conductance is most pronounced. Our interpretation is that, because of its rigidity, the crown feels an effective steric barrier in the narrowest part of the channel pore. This barrier together with crown-ion complexing and resultant interaction with the applied field leads to behavior usually associated with voltage-dependent binding in the channel pore.
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