Abstract

F1-ATPase (F1) is a bidirectional molecular motor that hydrolyzes nearly all ATPs to fuel the cellular processes. Optical observation of labeled F1 rotation against the α3β3 hexamer ring revealed the sequential mechanical rotation steps corresponding to ATP binding/ADP release and ATP hydrolysis/Pi release. These substeps originate from the F1 rotation but with heavy load on the γ shaft due to fluorescent labeling and the photophysical limitation of an optical microscope, which hampers better understanding of the intrinsic kinetic behavior of ATP hydrolysis. In this work, we present a method capable of electrically monitoring ATP hydrolysis of a single label-free F1 in real time by using a high-gain silicon nanowire-based field-effect transistor circuit. We reproducibly observe the regular current signal fluctuations with two distinct levels, which are induced by the binding dwell and the catalytic dwell, respectively, in both concentration- and temperature-dependent experiments. In comparison with labeled F1, the hydrolysis rate of nonlabeled F1 used in this study is 1 order of magnitude faster (1.69 × 108 M-1 s-1 at 20 °C), and the differences between two sequential catalytic rates are clearer, demonstrating the ability of nanowire nanocircuits to directly probe the intrinsic dynamic processes of the biological activities with single-molecule/single-event sensitivity. This approach is complementary to traditional optical methods, offering endless opportunities to unravel molecular mechanisms of a variety of dynamic biosystems under realistic physiological conditions.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call