https://www.selleckchem.com/products/AZD0530.html Proteins present a significant challenge for nanopore-based sequence analysis. This is partly due to their stable tertiary structures that must be unfolded for linear translocation, and the absence of regular charge density. To address these challenges, here we describe how ClpXP, an ATP-dependent protein unfoldase, can be harnessed to unfold and processively translocate multi-domain protein substrates through an alpha-hemolysin nanopore sensor. This process results in ionic current patterns that are diagnostic of protein sequence and structure at the single-molecule level.Nanopore technology enables the detection and analysis of single protein molecules. The technique measures the ionic current passing through a single pore inserted in an electrically insulating membrane. The translocation of the protein molecule through the pore causes a modulation of the ionic current. Analysis of the ionic current reveals the biophysics of co-translocational unfolding and may be used to infer the amino acid sequence and posttranslational modifications of the molecule.Many enzymatic activity assays are based on either (1) identifying and quantifying the enzyme with methods such as western blot or enzyme-linked substrate assay (ELISA) or (2) quantifying the enzymatic reaction by monitoring the changing levels of either product or substrate. We have generated an outer membrane protein G (OmpG)-based nanopore approach to distinguish enzyme identity as well as analyze the enzyme's catalytic activity. Here, we engineered an OmpG nanopore with a peptide cut site inserted into one of its loops to detect proteolytic behavior. In addition, we generated an OmpG nanopore with a single-stranded DNA attached to a loop for analyzing nucleolytic cleavage. This OmpG nanopore approach may be highly useful in analyzing specific enzymes in complex biological samples, or in directly determining kinetics of enzyme-substrate complex association and dis