A Chemical Strategy for Amphiphile Replacement in Membrane Protein Research. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Membrane mimics are indispensable tools in the structural and functional understanding of membrane proteins (MPs). Given stringent requirements of integral MP manipulations, amphiphile replacement is often required in sample preparation for various biophysical purposes. Current protocols generally rely on physical methodologies and rarely reach complete replacement. In comparison, we report herein a chemical alternative that facilitates the exhaustive exchange of membrane-mimicking systems for MP reconstitution. This method, named sacrifice-replacement strategy, was enabled by a class of chemically cleavable detergents (CCDs), derived from the disulfide incorporation in the traditional detergent n-dodecyl-β-d-maltopyranoside. The representative CCD behaved well in both solubilizing the diverse α-helical human G protein-coupled receptors and refolding of the β-barrel bacterial outer membrane protein X, and more importantly, it could also be readily degraded under mild conditions. By this means, the A2A adenosine receptor was successfully reconstituted into a series of commercial detergents for stabilization screening and nanodiscs for electron microscopy analysis. Featured by the simplicity and compatibility, this CCD-mediated strategy would later find more applications when being integrated in other biophysics studies.

authors

  • Xue, Dongxiang
  • Wang, Jingjing
  • Song, Xiyong
  • Wang, Wei
  • Hu, Tao
  • Ye, Lintao
  • Liu, Yang
  • Zhou, Qingtong
  • Zhou, Fang
  • Jiang, Zhong-Xing
  • Liu, Zhi-Jie
  • Tao, Houchao

publication date

  • March 12, 2019

Research

keywords

  • Membrane Proteins
  • Surface-Active Agents

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85063140958

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1021/acs.langmuir.8b04072

PubMed ID

  • 30781953

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 35

issue

  • 12