Multiplexed Electrochemistry of DNA-Bound Metalloproteins
- Publication date
- Publisher
Abstract
Here
we describe a multiplexed electrochemical characterization
of DNA-bound proteins containing [4Fe-4S] clusters. DNA-modified electrodes
have become an essential tool for the characterization of the redox
chemistry of DNA repair proteins containing redox cofactors, and multiplexing
offers a means to probe different complex samples and substrates in
parallel to elucidate this chemistry. Multiplexed analysis of endonuclease
III (EndoIII), a DNA repair protein containing a [4Fe-4S] cluster
known to be accessible via DNA-mediated charge transport, shows subtle
differences in the electrochemical behavior as a function of DNA morphology.
The peak splitting, signal broadness, sensitivity to π-stack
perturbations, and kinetics were all characterized for the DNA-bound
reduction of EndoIII on both closely and loosely packed DNA films.
DNA-bound EndoIII is seen to have two different electron transfer
pathways for reduction, either through the DNA base stack or through
direct surface reduction; closely packed DNA films, where the protein
has limited surface accessibility, produce electrochemical signals
reflecting electron transfer that is DNA-mediated. Multiplexing furthermore
permits the comparison of the electrochemistry of EndoIII mutants,
including a new family of mutations altering the electrostatics surrounding
the [4Fe-4S] cluster. While little change in the midpoint potential
was found for this family of mutants, significant variations in the
efficiency of DNA-mediated electron transfer were apparent. On the
basis of the stability of these proteins, examined by circular dichroism,
we propose that the electron transfer pathway can be perturbed not
only by the removal of aromatic residues but also through changes
in solvation near the cluster