Litcius/Paper detail

Protein identification by nanopore peptide profiling

Florian Leonardus Rudolfus Lucas, Roderick Corstiaan Abraham Versloot, Liubov Yakovlieva, Marthe T. C. Walvoort, Giovanni Maglia

2021Nature Communications133 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Nanopores are single-molecule sensors used in nucleic acid analysis, whereas their applicability towards full protein identification has yet to be demonstrated. Here, we show that an engineered Fragaceatoxin C nanopore is capable of identifying individual proteins by measuring peptide spectra that are produced from hydrolyzed proteins. Using model proteins, we show that the spectra resulting from nanopore experiments and mass spectrometry share similar profiles, hence allowing protein fingerprinting. The intensity of individual peaks provides information on the concentration of individual peptides, indicating that this approach is quantitative. Our work shows the potential of a low-cost, portable nanopore-based analyzer for protein identification.

Topics & Concepts

Profiling (computer programming)NanoporeComputational biologyIdentification (biology)PeptideComputer scienceBioinformaticsNanotechnologyChemistryBiologyBiochemistryMaterials scienceOperating systemBotanyNanopore and Nanochannel Transport StudiesIon-surface interactions and analysisMicrofluidic and Capillary Electrophoresis Applications
Protein identification by nanopore peptide profiling | Litcius