Many elastomeric proteins, which
play important roles
in a wide
range of biological processes, exist as parallel/antiparallelly arranged
dimers or multimers to perform their mechanobiological functions.
For example, in striated muscle sarcomeres, the giant muscle protein
titin exists as hexameric bundles to mediate the passive elasticity
of muscles. However, it has not been possible to directly probe the
mechanical properties of such parallelly arranged elastomeric proteins.
And it remains unknown if the knowledge obtained from single-molecule
force spectroscopy studies can be directly extrapolated to such parallelly/antiparallelly
arranged systems. Here, we report the development of atomic force
microscopy (AFM)-based two-molecule force spectroscopy to directly
probe the mechanical properties of two elastomeric proteins that are
arranged in parallel. We developed a twin-molecule approach to allow
two parallelly arranged elastomeric proteins to be picked up and stretched
simultaneously in an AFM experiment. Our results clearly revealed
the mechanical features of such parallelly arranged elastomeric proteins
during force–extension measurements and allowed for the determination
of mechanical unfolding forces of proteins in such an experimental
setting. Our study provides a general and robust experimental strategy
to closely mimic the physiological condition of such parallel elastomeric
protein multimers