Issue 2, 2018

Commensurability between protein nanotubes in contractile ejection nanomachines

Abstract

Contractile ejection nanomachines being sheath–tube assemblies create an opening in the cell membrane to translocate molecules or ions across it. Here, on the most structurally investigated examples of the bacteriophage T4 tail and pyocin R2, we show that the rearrangement of the sheath structure resulting in its contraction and twist occurs in such a way that the contracted sheath becomes commensurate with the inner tube. This fact dictates the previously unknown simple geometrical relationship between the nanotube symmetries. Using the Frank and van der Merwe classical theory of commensurability, we study an interaction between two protein nanotubes forming such nanomachines and obtain an expression for the corresponding energy, which depends on the tube structures and their mutual arrangement. The appearance of commensurability between the contracted sheath and the inner tube decreases both the interaction energy and the total energy of the system. It improves the nanomachine efficiency, since the energy gain obtained increases the torque of the inner tube piercing the cell membrane.

Graphical abstract: Commensurability between protein nanotubes in contractile ejection nanomachines

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
17 Sep 2017
Accepted
03 Dec 2017
First published
04 Dec 2017
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Nanoscale, 2018,10, 758-764

Commensurability between protein nanotubes in contractile ejection nanomachines

S. B. Rochal, D. S. Roshal, A. E. Myasnikova and V. L. Lorman, Nanoscale, 2018, 10, 758 DOI: 10.1039/C7NR06940E

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