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Portrait of Heiner Linke; Photo: Kennet Ruona

Heiner Linke

Professor, Deputy dean (prorektor) at Faculty of Engineering, LTH

Portrait of Heiner Linke; Photo: Kennet Ruona

The Tumbleweed: towards a synthetic protein motor

Author

  • Elizabeth H. C. Bromley
  • Nathan J. Kuwada
  • Martin J. Zuckermann
  • Roberta Donadini
  • Laleh Samii
  • Gerhard A. Blab
  • Gregory J. Gemmen
  • Benjamin J. Lopez
  • Paul M. G. Curmi
  • Nancy R. Forde
  • Derek N. Woolfson
  • Heiner Linke

Summary, in English

Biomolecular motors have inspired the design and construction of artificial nanoscale motors and machines based on nucleic acids, small molecules, and inorganic nanostructures. However, the high degree of sophistication and efficiency of biomolecular motors, as well as their specific biological function, derives from the complexity afforded by protein building blocks. Here, we discuss a novel bottom-up approach to understanding biological motors by considering the construction of synthetic protein motors. Specifically, we present a design for a synthetic protein motor that moves along a linear track, dubbed the "Tumbleweed." This concept uses three discrete ligand-dependent DNA-binding domains to perform cyclically ligand-gated, rectified diffusion along a synthesized DNA molecule. Here we describe how de novo peptide design and molecular biology could be used to produce the Tumbleweed, and we explore the fundamental motor operation of such a design using numerical simulations. The construction of this and more sophisticated protein motors is an exciting challenge that is likely to enhance our understanding of the structure-function relationship in biological motors. [DOI: 10.2976/1.3111282]

Department/s

  • Solid State Physics

Publishing year

2009

Language

English

Pages

204-212

Publication/Series

HFSP Journal

Volume

3

Issue

3

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

HFSP Publishing

Topic

  • Condensed Matter Physics

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1955-2068