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In silico assessment of a novel single-molecule protein fingerprinting method employing fragmentation and nanopore detection.


ABSTRACT: The identification of proteins at the single-molecule level would open exciting new venues in biological research and disease diagnostics. Previously, we proposed a nanopore-based method for protein identification called chop-n-drop fingerprinting, in which the fragmentation pattern induced and measured by a proteasome-nanopore construct is used to identify single proteins. In the simulation study presented here, we show that 97.1% of human proteome constituents are uniquely identified under close to ideal measuring circumstances, using a simple alignment-based classification method. We show that our method is robust against experimental error, as 69.4% can still be identified if the resolution is twice as low as currently attainable, and 10% of proteasome restriction sites and protein fragments are randomly ignored. Based on these results and our experimental proof of concept, we argue that chop-n-drop fingerprinting has the potential to make cost-effective single-molecule protein identification feasible in the near future.

SUBMITTER: de Lannoy C 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC8521182 | biostudies-literature | 2021 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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<i>In silico</i> assessment of a novel single-molecule protein fingerprinting method employing fragmentation and nanopore detection.

de Lannoy Carlos C   Lucas Florian Leonardus Rudolfus FLR   Maglia Giovanni G   de Ridder Dick D  

iScience 20211001 10


The identification of proteins at the single-molecule level would open exciting new venues in biological research and disease diagnostics. Previously, we proposed a nanopore-based method for protein identification called chop-n-drop fingerprinting, in which the fragmentation pattern induced and measured by a proteasome-nanopore construct is used to identify single proteins. In the simulation study presented here, we show that 97.1% of human proteome constituents are uniquely identified under clo  ...[more]

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