Single-molecule fingerprinting of protein-drug interaction using a funneled biological nanopore

  • Ki Baek Jeong
  • , Minju Ryu
  • , Jin Sik Kim
  • , Minsoo Kim
  • , Jejoong Yoo
  • , Minji Chung
  • , Sohee Oh
  • , Gyunghee Jo
  • , Seong Gyu Lee
  • , Ho Min Kim
  • , Mi Kyung Lee
  • , Seung Wook Chi

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

51 Scopus citations

Abstract

In drug discovery, efficient screening of protein-drug interactions (PDIs) is hampered by the limitations of current biophysical approaches. Here, we develop a biological nanopore sensor for single-molecule detection of proteins and PDIs using the pore-forming toxin YaxAB. Using this YaxAB nanopore, we demonstrate label-free, single-molecule detection of interactions between the anticancer Bcl-xL protein and small-molecule drugs as well as the Bak-BH3 peptide. The long funnel-shaped structure and nanofluidic characteristics of the YaxAB nanopore enable the electro-osmotic trapping of diverse folded proteins and high-resolution monitoring of PDIs. Distinctive nanopore event distributions observed in the two-dimensional (ΔI/Io-versus-IN) plot illustrate the ability of the YaxAB nanopore to discriminate individual small-molecule drugs bound to Bcl-xL from non-binders. Taken together, our results present the YaxAB nanopore as a robust platform for label-free, ultrasensitive, single-molecule detection of PDIs, opening up a possibility for low-cost, highly efficient drug discovery against diverse drug targets.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1461
JournalNature Communications
Volume14
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2023

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