TY - JOUR
T1 - Solid-state electron transport via cytochrome c depends on electronic coupling to electrodes and across the protein
AU - Amdursky, Nadav
AU - Ferber, Doron
AU - Bortolotti, Carlo Augusto
AU - Dolgikh, Dmitry A.
AU - Chertkova, Rita V.
AU - Pecht, Israel
AU - Sheves, Mordechai
AU - Cahen, David
N1 - We are very grateful to A. Kotlyar (Tel Aviv University) for his help with the mutants; Y. Barak for help with FPLC; D. Marchak, S. Mukhopadhyay, L. Sepunaru, and S. Raichlin for stimulating discussions; and the reviewers for constructive comments. We are grateful to the Minerva Foundation (Munich), The Nancy and Stephen Grand Centre for Sensors and Security, and The Kimmelman Center for Biomolecular Structure and Assembly for partial support. M.S. holds the Katzir-Makineni Chair in Chemistry. D.C. holds the Schaefer Chair in Energy Research
PY - 2014/4/15
Y1 - 2014/4/15
N2 - Electronic coupling to electrodes, G, as well as that across the examined molecules, H, is critical for solid-state electron transport (ETp) across proteins. Assessing the importance of each of these couplings helps to understand the mechanism of electron flow across molecules. We provide here experimental evidence for the importance of both couplings for solid-state ETp across the electron- mediating protein cytochrome c (CytC), measured in a monolayer configuration. Currents via CytC are temperature-independent between 30 and -130 K, consistent with tunneling by superexchange, and thermally activated at higher temperatures, ascribed to steady-state hopping. Covalent protein-electrode binding significantly increases G, as currents across CytC mutants, bound covalently to the electrode via a cysteine thiolate, are higher than those through electrostatically adsorbed CytC. Covalent binding also reduces the thermal activation energy, Ea, of the ETp by more than a factor of two. The importance of H was examined by using a series of seven CytC mutants with cysteine residues at different surface positions, yielding distinct electrode-protein(-heme) orientations and separation distances. We find that, in general, mutants with electrode-proximal heme have lower Ea values (from high-temperature data) and higher conductance at low temperatures (in the temperatureindependent regime) than those with a distal heme. We conclude that ETp across these mutants depends on the distance between the heme group and the top or bottom electrode, rather than on the total separation distance between electrodes (protein width).
AB - Electronic coupling to electrodes, G, as well as that across the examined molecules, H, is critical for solid-state electron transport (ETp) across proteins. Assessing the importance of each of these couplings helps to understand the mechanism of electron flow across molecules. We provide here experimental evidence for the importance of both couplings for solid-state ETp across the electron- mediating protein cytochrome c (CytC), measured in a monolayer configuration. Currents via CytC are temperature-independent between 30 and -130 K, consistent with tunneling by superexchange, and thermally activated at higher temperatures, ascribed to steady-state hopping. Covalent protein-electrode binding significantly increases G, as currents across CytC mutants, bound covalently to the electrode via a cysteine thiolate, are higher than those through electrostatically adsorbed CytC. Covalent binding also reduces the thermal activation energy, Ea, of the ETp by more than a factor of two. The importance of H was examined by using a series of seven CytC mutants with cysteine residues at different surface positions, yielding distinct electrode-protein(-heme) orientations and separation distances. We find that, in general, mutants with electrode-proximal heme have lower Ea values (from high-temperature data) and higher conductance at low temperatures (in the temperatureindependent regime) than those with a distal heme. We conclude that ETp across these mutants depends on the distance between the heme group and the top or bottom electrode, rather than on the total separation distance between electrodes (protein width).
KW - Bioelectronics
KW - Protein Conduction
KW - Temperature Dependence
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84898788727&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1073/pnas.1319351111
DO - 10.1073/pnas.1319351111
M3 - مقالة
C2 - 24706771
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 111
SP - 5556
EP - 5561
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
IS - 15
ER -