Discriminating protein tags on dsDNA constructs using a dual Nanopore device
Swarnadeep Seth, Arthur Rand, Walter Reisner, William B. Dunbar,, Robert Sladek, and Aniket Bhattacharya

TL;DR
This paper introduces a simulation strategy for analyzing protein tags on dsDNA using a dual nanopore device, improving measurement accuracy and discrimination of tags based on physical properties.
Contribution
The study develops a novel in silico simulation approach to understand and optimize dual nanopore measurements for protein-tagged DNA, revealing key parameters affecting detection.
Findings
Discriminates protein tags by effective charge and mass using dwell time analysis.
Validates simulation results with experimental dwell time distributions.
Provides insights to enhance measurement protocols for genomic length determination.
Abstract
We report a novel simulation strategy that enables us to identify key parameters controlling the experimentally measurable characteristics of structural protein tags on dsDNA construct translocating through a double nanopore setup. First, we validate the scheme in silico by reproducing and explaining the physical origin of the experimental dwell time distributions of the Streptavidin markers on a 48 kbp long dsDNA. These studies reveal the important differences in the characteristics of the protein tags compared to the dynamics of dsDNA segments, immediately providing clues on how to improve the measurement protocols to decipher the unknown genomic lengths accurately. Of particular importance is the in silico studies on the effect of electric field inside and beyond the pores which we find is critical to discriminate protein tags based on their effective charges and masses revealed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNanopore and Nanochannel Transport Studies · Advanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques · Microfluidic and Capillary Electrophoresis Applications
