In stochastic sensing, the association and dissociation of analyte molecules is observed as the modulation of an ionic current flowing through a single engineered protein pore, enabling the label-free determination of rate and equilibrium constants with respect to a specific binding site. We engineered sensors based on the staphylococcal ?-hemolysin pore to allow the single-molecule detection and characterization of protein kinase-peptide interactions. We enhanced this approach by using site-specific proteolysis to generate pores bearing a single peptide sensor element attached by an N-terminal peptide bond to the trans mouth of the pore. Kinetics and affinities for the Pim protein kinases (Pim-1, Pim-2, and Pim-3) and cAMP-dependent protein kinase were measured and found to be independent of membrane potential and in good agreement with previously reported data. Kinase binding exhibited a distinct current noise behavior that forms a basis for analyte discrimination. Finally, we observed unusually high association rate constants for the interaction of Pim kinases with their consensus substrate Pimtide (?107 to 108 M-1s-1), the result of electrostatic enhancement, and propose a cellular role for this phenomenon.
CITATION STYLE
Harrington, L., Cheley, S., Alexander, L. T., Knapp, S., & Bayley, H. (2013). Stochastic detection of Pim protein kinases reveals electrostatically enhanced association of a peptide substrate. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 110(47). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1312739110
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