5ET3
Crystal Structure of De novo Designed Fullerene organizing peptide
Summary for 5ET3
Entry DOI | 10.2210/pdb5et3/pdb |
Descriptor | Fullerene Organizing Protein (C60Sol-COP-3), (C_{60}-I_{h})[5,6]fullerene (3 entities in total) |
Functional Keywords | de novo protein, fullerene, complex, helical assembly |
Biological source | synthetic construct |
Total number of polymer chains | 2 |
Total formula weight | 7097.77 |
Authors | Kim, K.-H.,Kim, Y.H.,Acharya, R.,Kim, N.H.,Paul, J.,Grigoryan, G.,DeGrado, W.F. (deposition date: 2015-11-17, release date: 2016-05-04, Last modification date: 2023-11-08) |
Primary citation | Kim, K.-H.,Ko, D.-K.,Kim, Y.-T.,Kim, N.H.,Paul, J.,Zhang, S.-Q.,Murray, C.B.,Acharya, R.,DeGrado, W.F.,Kim, Y.H.,Grigoryan, G. Protein-directed self-assembly of a fullerene crystal. Nat Commun, 7:11429-11429, 2016 Cited by PubMed Abstract: Learning to engineer self-assembly would enable the precise organization of molecules by design to create matter with tailored properties. Here we demonstrate that proteins can direct the self-assembly of buckminsterfullerene (C60) into ordered superstructures. A previously engineered tetrameric helical bundle binds C60 in solution, rendering it water soluble. Two tetramers associate with one C60, promoting further organization revealed in a 1.67-Å crystal structure. Fullerene groups occupy periodic lattice sites, sandwiched between two Tyr residues from adjacent tetramers. Strikingly, the assembly exhibits high charge conductance, whereas both the protein-alone crystal and amorphous C60 are electrically insulating. The affinity of C60 for its crystal-binding site is estimated to be in the nanomolar range, with lattices of known protein crystals geometrically compatible with incorporating the motif. Taken together, these findings suggest a new means of organizing fullerene molecules into a rich variety of lattices to generate new properties by design. PubMed: 27113637DOI: 10.1038/ncomms11429 PDB entries with the same primary citation |
Experimental method | X-RAY DIFFRACTION (1.671 Å) |
Structure validation
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