Transmembrane protein channels enable fast and highly sensitive detection of single molecules. Nanopore sequencing of DNA was achieved using an engineered Mycobacterium smegmatis porin A (MspA) in combination with a motor enzyme. Due to its favorable channel geometry, the octameric MspA pore exhibits the highest current level compared with other pore proteins. To date, MspA is the only protein nanopore with a published record of DNA sequencing. While widely used in commercial devices, nanopore sequencing of DNA suffers from significant base-calling errors due to stochastic events of the complex DNA-motor-pore combination and the contribution of up to five nucleotides to the signal at each position. Different mu... More
Transmembrane protein channels enable fast and highly sensitive detection of single molecules. Nanopore sequencing of DNA was achieved using an engineered Mycobacterium smegmatis porin A (MspA) in combination with a motor enzyme. Due to its favorable channel geometry, the octameric MspA pore exhibits the highest current level compared with other pore proteins. To date, MspA is the only protein nanopore with a published record of DNA sequencing. While widely used in commercial devices, nanopore sequencing of DNA suffers from significant base-calling errors due to stochastic events of the complex DNA-motor-pore combination and the contribution of up to five nucleotides to the signal at each position. Different mutations in specific subunits of a pore protein offer an enormous potential to improve nucleotide resolution and sequencing accuracy. However, individual subunits of MspA and other oligomeric protein pores are randomly assembled in vivo and in vitro, preventing the efficient production of designed pores with different subunit mutations. In this study, we converted octameric MspA into a single-chain pore by connecting eight subunits using peptide linkers. Lipid bilayer experiments demonstrated that single-chain MspA formed membrane-spanning channels and discriminated all four nucleotides identical to MspA produced from monomers in DNA hairpin experiments. Single-chain constructs comprising three, five, six, and seven connected subunits assembled to functional channels, demonstrating a remarkable plasticity of MspA to different subunit stoichiometries. Thus, single-chain MspA constitutes a new milestone in the optimization of MspA as a biosensor for DNA sequencing and many other applications by enabling the production of pores with distinct subunit mutations and pore diameters.