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Single Molecule Nanopore Spectrometry for Peptide Detection
Author(s) -
Amy E. Chavis,
Kyle T. Brady,
Grace A. Hatmaker,
Christopher E. Angevine,
Nuwan Kothalawala,
Amala Dass,
Joseph W. F. Robertson,
Joseph E. Reiner
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
acs sensors
Language(s) - Uncategorized
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.055
H-Index - 57
ISSN - 2379-3694
DOI - 10.1021/acssensors.7b00362
Subject(s) - nanopore , chemistry , molecule , peptide , polyethylene glycol , mass spectrometry , monomer , combinatorial chemistry , biomolecule , peg ratio , small molecule , nanotechnology , biophysics , chromatography , materials science , biochemistry , polymer , organic chemistry , finance , economics , biology
Sensing and characterization of water-soluble peptides is of critical importance in a wide variety of bioapplications. Single molecule nanopore spectrometry (SMNS) is based on the idea that one can use biological protein nanopores to resolve different sized molecules down to limits set by the blockade duration and noise. Previous work has shown that this enables discrimination between polyethylene glycol (PEG) molecules that differ by a single monomer unit. This paper describes efforts to extend SMNS to a variety of biologically relevant, water-soluble peptides. We describe the use of Au 25 (SG) 18 clusters, previously shown to improve PEG detection, to increase the on- and off-rate of peptides to the pore. In addition, we study the role that fluctuations play in the single molecule nanopore spectrometry (SMNS) methodology and show that modifying solution conditions to increase peptide flexibility (via pH or chaotropic salt) leads to a nearly 2-fold reduction in the current blockade fluctuations and a corresponding narrowing of the peaks in the blockade distributions. Finally, a model is presented that connects the current blockade depths to the mass of the peptides, which shows that our enhanced SMNS detection improves the mass resolution of the nanopore sensor more than 2-fold for the largest cationic peptides studied.

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