Concanavalin A Delivers a Photoactive Protein to the Bacterial Wall
Author
Other authors
Publication date
2024-05-25ISSN
1422-0067
Abstract
Modular supramolecular complexes, where different proteins are assembled to gather targeting capability and photofunctional properties within the same structures, are of special interest for bacterial photodynamic inactivation, given their inherent biocompatibility and flexibility. We have recently proposed one such structure, exploiting the tetrameric bacterial protein streptavidin as the main building block, to target S. aureus protein A. To expand the palette of targets, we have linked biotinylated Concanavalin A, a sugar-binding protein, to a methylene blue-labelled streptavidin. By applying a combination of spectroscopy and microscopy, we demonstrate the binding of Concanavalin A to the walls of Gram-positive S. aureus and Gram-negative E. coli. Photoinactivation is observed for both bacterial strains in the low micromolar range, although the moderate affinity for the molecular targets and the low singlet oxygen yields limit the overall efficiency. Finally, we apply a maximum entropy method to the analysis of autocorrelation traces, which proves particularly useful when interpreting signals measured for diffusing systems heterogeneous in size, such as fluorescent species bound to bacteria.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
577 - Material bases of life. Biochemistry. Molecular biology. Biophysics
Keywords
photodynamic effect
targeted photodynamic inactivation
single molecule localization microscopy
dSTORM
photosensitizer
fluorescence correlation spectroscopy
diffusion times distribution
Pages
18 p.
Publisher
MDPI
Is part of
International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2024;25(11):5751
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
Rights
© L'autor/a
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/