Hoersch Daniel
Experimental Molecular Biophysics, Department of Physics, Freie Universität Berlin , Berlin , Germany.
PeerJ. 2016 Jul 28;4:e2286. doi: 10.7717/peerj.2286. eCollection 2016.
The F1 sub-complex of ATP synthase is a biological nanomotor that converts the free energy of ATP hydrolysis into mechanical work with an astonishing efficiency of up to 100% (Kinosita et al., 2000). To probe the principal mechanics of the machine, I re-engineered the active site of E.coli F1 ATPase with a structure-based protein design approach: by incorporation of a site-specific, photoswitchable crosslinker, whose end-to-end distance can be modulated by illumination with light of two different wavelengths, a dynamic constraint was imposed on the inter-atomic distances of the α and β subunits. Crosslinking reduced the ATP hydrolysis activity of four designs tested in vitro and in one case created a synthetic ATPase whose activity can be reversibly modulated by subsequent illumination with near UV and blue light. The work is a first step into the direction of the long-term goal to design nanoscaled machines based on biological parts that can be precisely controlled by light.
ATP合酶的F1亚复合体是一种生物纳米马达,它能将ATP水解的自由能转化为机械功,效率高达100%,令人惊叹(木下等,2000年)。为了探究该机器的主要力学原理,我采用基于结构的蛋白质设计方法对大肠杆菌F1 ATP酶的活性位点进行了重新设计:通过引入一种位点特异性的、可光开关的交联剂,其端到端距离可通过用两种不同波长的光照射来调节,从而对α和β亚基的原子间距离施加动态约束。交联降低了在体外测试的四种设计的ATP水解活性,在一种情况下还产生了一种合成ATP酶,其活性可通过随后用近紫外光和蓝光照射而可逆地调节。这项工作是朝着基于可被光精确控制的生物部件设计纳米级机器这一长期目标迈出的第一步。