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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Hydrophobic Hydration of a Single Polymer

Li, Isaac Tian Shi 17 December 2012 (has links)
Hydrophobic interactions guide important molecular self-assembly processes such as protein folding. On the macroscale, hydrophobic interactions consist of the aggregation of "oil-like" objects in water by minimizing the interfacial energy. However, the hydration mechanism of small hydrophobic molecules on the nanoscale (~1 nm) differs fundamentally from its macroscopic counterpart. Theoretical studies over the last two decades have pointed to an intricate dependence of molecular hydration mechanisms on the length scale. The microscopic-to-macroscopic cross-over length scale is critically important to hydrophobic interactions in polymers, proteins and other macromolecules. Accurate experimental determination of hydration mechanisms and their interaction strengths are needed to understand protein folding. This thesis reports the development of experimental and analytical techniques that allow for direct measurements of hydrophobic interactions in a single molecule. Using single molecule force spectroscopy, the mechanical unfolding of a single hydrophobic homopolymer was identified and modeled. Two experiments examined how hydrophobicity at the molecular scale differ from the macroscopic scale. The first experiment identifies macroscopic interfacial tension as a critical parameter governing the molecular hydrophobic hydration strength. This experiment shows that the solvent conditions affect the microscopic and macroscopic hydrophobic strengths in similar ways, consistent with theoretical predictions. The second experiment probes the hydrophobic size effect by studying how the size of a non-polar side-chain affects the thermal signatures of hydration. Our experimental results reveal a cross-over length scale of approximately 1 nm that bridges the transition from entropically driven microscopic hydration mechanism to enthalpically driven macroscopic hydration mechanism. These results indicate that hydrophobic interactions at the molecular scale differ from macroscopic scale, pointing to potential ways to improve our understanding and predictions of molecular interactions. The system established in this thesis forms the foundation for further investigation of polymer hydrophobicity.
12

Molecular assemblies observed by atomic force microscopy

Cisneros Armas, David Alejandro 25 June 2007 (has links)
We use time-lapse AFM to visualize collagen fibrils self-assembly. A solution of acid-solubilized collagen was injected into the AFM fluid cell and fibril formation was observed in vitro. Single fibrils continuously grew and fused with each other until the supporting surface was completely covered by a nanoscopically well-defined collagen matrix. Laterally, the fibrils grew in steps of ~4 nm suggesting a two-step mechanism. In a first step, collagen molecules associated together. In the second step, these molecules rearranged into a structure called a microfibril. High-resolution AFM topographs revealed substructural details of the D-band architecture. These substructures correlated well with those revealed from positively stained collagen fibers imaged by transmission electron microscopy. Secondly, a covalent assembly approach to prepare membrane protein for AFM imaging that avoids crystallization was proposed. High-resolution AFM topographs can reveal structural details of single membrane proteins but, as a prerequisite, the proteins must be adsorbed to atomically flat mica and densely packed in a membrane to restrict their lateral mobility. Atomically flat gold, engineered proteins, and chemically modified lipids were combined to rapidly assemble immobile and fully oriented samples. The resulting AFM topographs of single membrane proteins were used to create averaged structures with a resolution approaching that of 2D crystals. Finally, the contribution of specific amino acid residues to the stability of membrane proteins was studied. Two structurally similar proteins sharing only 30% sequence identity were compared. Single-molecule atomic force microscopy and spectroscopy was used to detect molecular interactions stabilizing halorhodopsin (HR) and bacteriorhodopsin (BR). Their unfolding pathways and polypeptide regions that established stable segments were compared. Both proteins unfolded exactly via the same intermediates. This 3 Molecular Assemblies observed by AFM observation implies that these stabilizing regions result from comprehensive contacts of all amino acids within them and that different amino acid compositions can establish structurally indistinguishable energetic barriers. However, one additional unfolding barrier located in a short segment of helix E was detected for HR. This barrier correlated with a Pi-bulk interaction, which locally disrupts helix E and divides into two stable segments.
13

Synthesis and AFM-based single-molecule force spectroscopy of helical aromatic oligoamide foldamers / Synthèse et spectroscopie de force sur molécule unique par AFM de foldamères hélicoïdaux d'oligoamides aromatiques

Devaux, Floriane 14 December 2018 (has links)
Les foldamères sont des architectures moléculaires synthétiques repliées, inspirées par les structures et les fonctions des biopolymères naturels. Le repliement est un processus sélectionné par la nature pour contrôler la conformation de sa machinerie moléculaire afin de réaliser des tâches chimiques ou mécaniques. Durant les dix dernières années de recherche sur les foldamères, des oligomères synthétiques, capables d'adopter des conformations repliées bien définies et prévisibles, comme des hélices, ont été proposés. Les progrès récents ont montré que la synthèse chimique par étapes et le design moléculaire basé sur un squelette oligoamide aromatique permettaient de produire des architectures moléculaires repliées de manière hélicoïdale. La forme du squelette et sa rigidité, des préférences conformationnelles locales, des interactions spécifiques entre monomères éloignés dans une séquence, ainsi que l'action de paramètres externes comme le solvant, ou la présence d'ions peuvent être combinés pour induire une tendance au repliement. Ces architectures sont remarquables car elles peuvent donner lieu à des motifs de repliement qui n'ont pas d'équivalent dans les structures des biopolymères naturels. Par exemple, des hélices dont le diamètre varie le long de la séquence, ou des hélices possédant un centre d'inversion du pas, des hélices en chevrons,... ont été rapportées. Alors que les structures de ces molécules hélicoïdales ont été abondamment caractérisées à l'état solide par cristallographie des rayons X, leur comportement en solution, et surtout le comportement dynamique, est très peu connu. Leurs propriétés mécano-chimiques sont quant à elles inconnues à ce jour. L'objectif du projet est de synthétiser différentes molécules synthétiques hélicoïdales de type oligoamide aromatique et d'obtenir une description détaillée de leur conformation dynamique en solution, ainsi que de leurs propriétés mécano-chimiques, par spectroscopie de force sur molécule unique basée sur l'AFM. / Foldamers are artificial folded molecular architectures inspired by the structures and functions of natural biopolymers. Folding is the process selected by nature to control the conformation of its molecular machinery to carry out chemical functions and mechanical tasks, such as en-zyme catalysis, duplication in nucleic acids, force generation,... During the last decade of research on foldamers, synthetic oligomers able to adopt well- defined and predictable folded conformations, such as helices, have been proposed. Recent progress has shown that stepwise chemical synthesis and molecular design based on aromatic oligoamide backbones enable to produce large helically folded molecular architectures. The shape and stiffness of the backbone, local conformational preferences, specific interactions between distant monomers in sequences, as well as the action of external parameters such as the solvent or the presence of ions, can be combine to induce folding tendency. A remarkable aspect of these architectures is that they can give rise to folded patterns that have no in natural counterparts biopolymer structures. For instance, helices whose diameter varies along the se-quence, helices possessing a handedness inversion centre, herringbone helices have been reported. While the structures of these helical molecules have been well characterized in the solid state by X-ray crystallography, much less is known about their dynamic behavior in solution. Their mechanochemical properties are unknown. The objective of the project is to synthesize various helical nanorchitectures based on an oli-goamide aromatic backbone and to obtain a detailed picture of their dynamical conformation in solution, as well as, their mechanochemical properties, by AFM-based single molecule force spectroscopy.
14

Nanomechanics of Ankyrin Repeat Proteins

Lee, Whasil January 2011 (has links)
<p>Ankyrin repeats (ARs) are polypeptide motifs identified in thousands of proteins. Many AR proteins play a function as scaffolds in protein-protein interactions which may require specific mechanical properties. Also, a number of AR proteins have been proposed to mediate mechanotransduction in a variety of different functional settings. The folding and stability of a number of AR proteins have been studied in detail by chemical and temperature denaturation experiments, yet the mechanic of AR proteins remain largely unknown. In this dissertation, we have researched the mechanical properties of AR proteins by using protein engineering and a combination of atomic force microscopy (AFM)-based single-molecule force spectroscopy and steered molecular dynamics (SMD) simulations. Three kinds of AR proteins were investigated: NI6C (synthetic AR protein), D34 (of ankyrin-R) and gankyrin (oncoprotein). While the main focus of this research was to characterize the response of AR proteins to mechanical forces, our results extended beyond the protein nanomechanics to the understanding of protein folding mechanisms.</p> / Dissertation
15

Pattern Recognition in Single Molecule Force Spectroscopy Data

Paulin, Hilary 05 September 2013 (has links)
We have developed an analytical technique for single molecule force spectroscopy (SMFS) data that avoids filtering prior to analysis and performs pattern recognition to identify distinct SMFS events. The technique characterizes the signal similarity between all curves in a data set and generates a hierarchical clustering tree, from which clusters can be identified, aligned, and examined to identify key patterns. This procedure was applied to alpha-lactalbumin (aLA) on polystyrene substrates with flat and nanoscale curvature, and bacteriorhodopsin (bR) adsorbed on mica substrates. Cluster patterns identified for the aLA data sets were associated with different higher-order protein-protein interactions. Changes in the frequency of the patterns showed an increase in the monomeric signal from flat to curved substrates. Analysis of the bR data showed a high level of multiple protein SMFS events and allowed for the identification of a set of characteristic three-peak unfolding events.
16

Propriétés biophysiques des cardiomyocytes vivants en condition physio/physiopathologique et architecture des récepteurs couplés aux protéines G explorées par microscopie à force atomique / Biophysical properties of cardiomyocytes in physio / physiopathological conditions and of G protein coupled receptors architecture explored by atomic force microscopy

Lachaize, Véronique 11 October 2016 (has links)
L'insuffisance cardiaque est un réel problème de santé publique avec 1 millions de patients souffrant de cette pathologie cette année en France. Elle est définie incapacité de fournir un débit sanguin suffisant à l'organisme. Cette diminution de débit est traduite par la perte de fonction contractile du coeur provoqué par la nécrose des cellules responsable de cette fonction : les cardiomyocytes. Dans cette étude j'ai pu étudier les modifications topographiques et biomécaniques de la membrane du cardiomyocyte vivant en amont de sa rupture lors de la nécrose, par une technologie issue des nanosciences : la microscopie à force atomique (AFM). Mes travaux ont fait apparaitre une membrane très structurée chez le cardiomyocyte sain et une perte de cette architecture dans un temps précoce de l'installation de l'insuffisance cardiaque. L'utilisation de la microscopie électronique à transmission à montrer que les anomalies mises en évidences par AFM ont pour origine un réarrangement mitochondriale. Dans une seconde étude je me suis intéressée à l'organisation oligomérique d'une famille particulière de récepteur transmembranaire, les récepteurs couplés aux protéines G. Ces protéines sont une des cibles privilégiées pour les traitements pharmacologiques de l'insuffisance cardiaque tel que le bêta-bloquants et les vasodilatateurs. Ce mécanisme d'oligomérisation pourrait être la clef des effets secondaires liés à ces traitements. Afin d'étudier la conformation oligomérique, j'ai utilisé la spectroscopie de force à l'échelle de la molécule unique pour mettre en évidence différentes populations oligomérique de ces récepteurs sur la surface membranaire. Les résultats ont montré une distribution des populations oligomériques en fonction des conditions (densité de plasmide codants pour les récepteurs/stimulation avec agoniste synthétique ou naturel). Il est possible qu'il y ait une régulation des voies de signalisations par l'oligomérisation des récepteurs activés. La différence d'activité possible de chaque population oligomérique (monomère/dimère/tétramère/hexamère) semble être une explication plausible aux effets secondaire des agents pharmacologique. Mes travaux de thèse ont permis la mise en évidence de nouvelle piste par une technologie innovante, la microscopie à force atomique, dans le traitement de l'insuffisance cardiaqu / Heart failure is a public health problem with 1 million patients this year in France. This pathology is defined inability to heart pump sufficiently to maintain blood flow to meet the body's needs. This decrease is explicated by the loss of contractile function of the heart, caused by the necrosis of the contractile cells: cardiomyocytes. In this study, I was able to study the topographic and biomechanical modification of the cardiomyocyte membrane upstream of its rupture during necrosis, by technology derived from nanosciences : atomic force microscopy (AFM). My work reveals a highly structured membrane in healthy cardiomyocytes and a loss of this architecture in an early stage of the heart failure installation. In a second study I was interested in the oligomeric organization of a transmembrane receptors family , G protein-coupled receptors. These proteins are a privileged target for the pharmacological treatments on heart failure such as beta- Blockers and vasodilators. This oligomerization mechanism could be the key to the side effects associated with treatments. In order to study the oligomeric conformation, I used single molecule force spectroscopy and I reveal different oligomeric populations of these receptors on the membrane. The results showed a oligomeric populations distribution according the conditions (plasmid density coding for receptors / stimulation with synthetic or natural agonist). It is possible that there is a regulation of the signaling pathways, using the oligomerization for specific activation receptors. The possible difference in activity of each oligomeric population (monomer / dimer / tetramer / hexamer) appears to be a plausible explanation for the side effects of pharmacological agents. My thesis work allowed the discovery of a new track by an innovative technology, atomic force microscopy, in the treatment of heart failure.
17

Probing The Nanoscale Interaction Forces And Elastic Properties Of Organic And Inorganic Materials Using Force-distance (f-d) Spectroscopy

Vincent, Abhilash 01 January 2010 (has links)
Due to their therapeutic applications such as radical scavenging, MRI contrast imaging, Photoluminescence imaging, drug delivery, etc., nanoparticles (NPs) have a significant importance in bio-nanotechnology. The reason that prevents the utilizing NPs for drug delivery in medical field is mostly due to their biocompatibility issues (incompatibility can lead to toxicity and cell death). Changes in the surface conditions of NPs often lead to NP cytotoxicity. Investigating the role of NP surface properties (surface charges and surface chemistry) on their interactions with biomolecules (Cells, protein and DNA) could enhance the current understanding of NP cytotoxicity. Hence, it is highly beneficial to the nanotechnology community to bring more attention towards the enhancement of surface properties of NPs to make them more biocompatible and less toxic to biological systems. Surface functionalization of NPs using specific ligand biomolecules have shown to enhance the protein adsorption and cellular uptake through more favorable interaction pathways. Cerium oxide NPs (CNPs also known as nanoceria) are potential antioxidants in cell culture models and understanding the nature of interaction between cerium oxide NPs and biological proteins and cells are important due to their therapeutic application (especially in site specific drug delivery systems). The surface charges and surface chemistry of CNPs play a major role in protein adsorption and cellular uptake. Hence, by tuning the surface charges and by selecting proper functional molecules on the surface, CNPs exhibiting strong adhesion to biological materials can be prepared. By probing the nanoscale interaction forces acting between CNPs and protein molecules using Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) based force-distance (F-D) spectroscopy, the mechanism of CNP-protein adsorption and CNP cellular uptake can be understood more quantitatively. The work presented in this dissertation is based on the application of AFM in studying the interaction forces as well as the mechanical properties of nanobiomaterials. The research protocol employed in the earlier part of the dissertation is specifically aimed to understand the operation of F-D spectroscopy technique. The elastic properties of thin films of silicon dioxide NPs were investigated using F-D spectroscopy in the high force regime of few 100 nN to 1 µN. Here, sol-gel derived porous nanosilica thin films of varying surface morphology, particle size and porosity were prepared through acid and base catalyzed process. AFM nanoindentation experiments were conducted on these films using the F-D spectroscopy mode and the nanoscale elastic properties of these films were evaluated. The major contribution of this dissertation is a study exploring the interaction forces acting between CNPs and transferrin proteins in picoNewton scale regime using the force-distance spectroscopy technique. This study projects the importance of obtaining appropriate surface charges and surface chemistry so that the NP can exhibit enhanced protein adsorption and NP cellular uptake.
18

Binding forces in metallo-supramolecular coordination compounds

Gensler, Manuel 15 March 2017 (has links)
Multivalente Wechselwirkungen sind in diversen biomolekularen und supramolekularen Systemen anzutreffen. Gewöhnlich werden sie durch ihre thermische Stabilität charakterisiert. Doch auch das mechanische Reißverhalten ist relevant: Ein System mit großer Reißlänge (Verformbarkeit) weist zwar eine geringere Reißkraft auf, kann aber besser auf äußere Einflüsse ohne Bindungsbruch reagieren. Daher besteht ein zunehmendes Interesse an Modellen zur Vorhersage der mechanischen Stabilität multivalenter Wechselwirkungen. Einzelmolekül-Kraftspektroskopie (SMFS) ist eine nützliche Methode, um den Reißprozess nichtkovalenter Wechselwirkungen zu studieren. Im Rahmen dieser Dissertation wurden mono- und bivalenten Pyridine, komplexiert und verbunden durch Cu(II) und Zn(II), entworfen und untersucht. Die drei bivalenten Pyridine wiesen unterschiedlich flexible Rückgratstrukturen auf (flexibel, teilflexibel, steif). Überraschenderweise wurde ein anderer Trend für die Verformbarkeiten gemessen (flexibel > steif > teilflexibel). Durch Vergleich von experimentellen Daten mit ab-initio Berechnungen konnten komplexe Reißmechanismen vorgeschlagen werden: Das Lösungsmittel war entscheidend und führte zu wasserverbrückten Zwischenprodukten, was die Verformbarkeit aller Systeme stark erhöhte. Im bivalente System mit teilflexiblem Rückgrat, koordiniert durch Cu(II), rissen beide Bindungen gleichzeitig bei vergleichsweise großen Kräften. Die beiden anderen Systeme mit Cu(II) wurden in zweistufigen Prozessen voneinander getrennt, was kleinere Reißkräfte zur Folge hatte. Insbesondere das flexible System war zwar thermisch stabiler, brach aber leichter als das monovalente System. Damit wurde zum ersten Mal der große Einfluss des Rückgrats, bei sonst gleicher Art von Wechselwirkung, auf die mechanische Stabilität bivalenter Wechselwirkungen gezeigt. Außerdem ist das entwickelte Modellsystem sehr nützlich für weiterführende Untersuchungen in biologisch relevanten wässrigen Lösungsmitteln. / Multivalent interactions are ubiquitous in biomolecular and supramolecular systems. They are commonly characterized by their thermal stability in terms of average bond lifetime or equilibration constant. However, also mechanical stabilities are relevant: A system with high rupture length (malleability) has a lower rupture force, but can more easily adopt to external constraints without rupture. Thus it is of ever-increasing interest to find appropriate models that allow predictions on the mechanical stability of multivalent interactions. Single-molecule force spectroscopy (SMFS) is a powerful tool to study the rupture process of non-covalent interactions. In the present thesis, a comprehensive study on the mechanical stability of bivalent pyridine coordination compounds with the metal ions Cu(II) and Zn(II) was performed. Surprisingly, three different backbone flexibilities (high, intermediate, low) did not correlate with the measured malleabilities (high > low > intermediate). Instead, comparison between experimental results and ab-initio calculations revealed more complex underlying rupture mechanisms: Due to the aqueous environment, hydrogen bound complexes were formed and important intermediate structures that strongly increased malleabilities. Both interactions of the intermediately flexible bivalent system with Cu(II) broke simultaneous, yielding comparatively large rupture forces. The bivalent interactions of high and low backbone flexibility with Cu(II) broke stepwise at smaller forces. Although being thermally more stable, the highly flexible system even broke at lower forces than the monovalent system. Thereby it was shown for the first time, that rupture forces of similar systems can be tuned over a broad range, just by changing the connecting backbone structure. Furthermore, the developed approach is a rich toolkit to study further the balanced interplay between rupture force and malleability in biologically relevant aqueous solvents.
19

Single-Molecule Measurements of Complex Molecular Interactions in Membrane Proteins using Atomic Force Microscopy / Einzelmolekül-Messungen komplexer molekularer Wechselwirkungen in Membranproteinen unter Benutzung des Rasterkraftmikroskops

Sapra, K. Tanuj 04 April 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Single-molecule force spectroscopy (SMFS) with atomic force microscope (AFM) has advanced our knowledge of the mechanical aspects of biological processes, and helped us take big strides in the hitherto unexplored areas of protein (un)folding. One such virgin land is that of membrane proteins, where the advent of AFM has not only helped to visualize the difficult to crystallize membrane proteins at the single-molecule level, but also given a new perspective in the understanding of the interplay of molecular interactions involved in the construction of these molecules. My PhD work was tightly focused on exploiting this sensitive technique to decipher the intra- and intermolecular interactions in membrane proteins, using bacteriorhodopsin and bovine rhodopsin as model systems. Using single-molecule unfolding measurements on different bacteriorhodopsin oligomeric assemblies - trimeric, dimeric and monomeric - it was possible to elucidate the contribution of intra- and interhelical interactions in single bacteriorhodopsin molecules. Besides, intriguing insights were obtained into the organization of bacteriorhodopsin as trimers, as deduced from the unfolding pathways of the proteins from different assemblies. Though the unfolding pathways of bacteriorhodopsin from all the assemblies remained the same, the different occurrence probability of these pathways suggested a kinetic stabilization of bacteriorhodopsin from a trimer compared to that existing as a monomer. Unraveling the knot of a complex G-protein coupled receptor, rhodopsin, showed the existence of two structural states, a native, functional state, and a non-native, non-functional state, corresponding to the presence or absence of a highly conserved disulfide bridge, respectively. The molecular interactions in absence of the native disulfide bridge mapped onto the three-dimensional structure of native rhodopsin gave insights into the molecular origin of the neurodegenerative disease retinitis pigmentosa. This presents a novel technique to decipher molecular interactions of a different conformational state of the same molecule in the absence of a high-resolution X-ray crystal structure. Interestingly, the presence of ZnCl2 maintained the integrity of the disulfide bridge and the nature of unfolding intermediates. Moreover, the increased mechanical and thermodynamic stability of rhodopsin with bound zinc ions suggested a plausible role for the bivalent ion in rhodopsin dimerization and consequently signal transduction. Last but not the least, I decided to dig into the mysteries of the real mechanisms of mechanical unfolding with the help of well-chosen single point mutations in bacteriorhodopsin. The monumental work has helped me to solve some key questions regarding the nature of mechanical barriers that constitute the intermediates in the unfolding process. Of particular interest is the determination of altered occurrence probabilities of unfolding pathways in an energy landscape and their correlation to the intramolecular interactions with the help of bioinformatics tools. The kind of work presented here, in my opinion, will not only help us to understand the basic principles of membrane protein (un)folding, but also to manipulate and tune energy landscapes with the help of small molecules, proteins, or mutations, thus opening up new vistas in medicine and pharmacology. It is just a matter of a lot of hard work, some time, and a little bit of luck till we understand the key elements of membrane protein (un)folding and use it to our advantage.
20

Investigation of biological macromolecules using atomic force microscope-based techniques

Bippes, Christian Alexander 19 August 2009 (has links) (PDF)
The atomic force microscope (AFM) provides a powerful instrument for investigating and manipulating biological samples down to the subnanometer scale. In contrast to other microscopy methods, AFM does not require labeling, staining, nor fixation of samples and allows the specimen to be fully hydrated in buffer solution during the experiments. Moreover, AFM clearly compares in resolution to other techniques. In general, the AFM can be operated in an imaging or a force spectroscopy mode. In the present work, advantage was taken of this versatility to investigate single biomolecules and biomolecular assemblies. A novel approach to investigate the visco-elastic behavior of biomolecules under force was established, using dextran as an example. While a molecule tethered between a solid support and the cantilever tip was stretched at a constant velocity, the thermally driven oscillation of the cantilever was recorded. Analysis of the cantilever Brownian noise provided information about the visco-elastic properties of dextran that corresponded well to parameters obtained by alternative methods. However, the approach presented here was easier to implement and less time-consuming than previously used methods. A computer controlled force-clamp system was set up, circumventing the need for custom built analogue electronics. A commercial PicoForce AFM was extended by two computers which hosted data acquisition hardware. While the first computer recorded data, the second computer drove the AFM bypassing the manufacturer's microscope control software. To do so, a software-based proportional-integral-differential (PID) controller was implemented on the second computer. It allowed the force applied to a molecule to be held constant over time. After tuning of the PID controller, response times obtained using that force-clamp setup were comparable to those of the recently reported analogue systems. The performance of the setup was demonstrated by force-clamp unfolding of a pentameric Ig25 construct and the membrane protein NhaA. In the latter case, short-lived unfolding intermediates that were populated for less than 10 ms, could be revealed. Conventional single-molecule dynamic force spectroscopy was used to unfold the serine:threonine antiporter SteT from Bacillus subtilis, an integral membrane protein. Unfolding force patterns revealed the unfolding barriers stabilizing structural segments of SteT. Ligand binding did not induce new unfolding barriers suggesting that weak interactions with multiple structural segments were involved. In contrast, ligand binding caused changes in the energy landscape of all structural segments, thus turning the protein from a brittle, rigid into a more stable, structurally flexible conformation. Functionally, rigidity in the ligand-free state was thought to facilitate specific ligand binding, while flexibility and increased stability were required for conformational changes associated with substrate translocation. These results support the working model for transmembrane transport proteins that provide alternate access of the binding site to either face of the membrane. Finally, high-resolution imaging was exploited to visualize the extracellular surface of Cx26 gap junction hemichannels (connexons). AFM topographs reveal pH-dependent structural changes of the extracellular connexon surface in presence of HEPES, an aminosulfonate compound. At low pH (&amp;lt; 6.5), connexons showed a narrow and shallow channel entrance, which represented the closed pore. Increasing pH values resulted in a gradual opening of the pore, which was reflected by increasing channel entrance widths and depths. At pH &amp;gt; 7.6 the pore was fully opened and the pore diameter and depth did not increase further. Importantly, coinciding with pore gating a slight rotation of the subunits was observed. In the absence of aminosulfonate compounds, such as HEPES, acidification did not affect pore diameters and depths, retaining the open state. Thus, the intracellular concentration of taurine, a naturally abundant aminosulfonate compound, might be used to tune gap junction sensitivity at low pH.

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