An NMR Approach for Investigating Membrane Protein-Lipid Interactions Using Native Reverse Micelles.

IF 1 Q3 BIOLOGY
Sara H Walters, Brian Fuglestad
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Abstract

Peripheral membrane proteins (PMPs) are a subgroup of membrane-associated proteins that are water-soluble and bind to membranes, often reversibly, to perform their function. These proteins have been extensively studied in the aqueous state, but there is often a lack of high-resolution structural and functional studies of these proteins in the membrane-bound state. Currently, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is among the best-equipped methods to study these relatively small proteins and domains, but current models have some disadvantages that prevent a full understanding of PMP interactions with membranes and lipids. Micelles, bicelles, and nanodiscs are all available for NMR observation but are based on synthetic lipids that may destabilize proteins or are too large to accommodate straightforward structural analysis. This protocol introduces a method for forming reverse micelles using lipids from natural sources, here called native reverse micelles. This technique allows the PMPs to embed within a shell of naturally derived lipids surrounding a small water core solubilized in an alkane solvent. PMP embedment in the lipid shell mimics binding to a cellular membrane. Here, naturally derived lipids from soy, bovine heart, and porcine brain are used in conjunction with n-dodecylphosphocholine (DPC) to encapsulate a PMP from either concentrated or dried protein, resulting in reverse micelles that may be confirmed via dynamic light scattering and NMR. This protocol allows for high-quality NMR data of PMPs interacting with membrane lipids within a biologically accurate environment. Key features • This protocol describes using natural lipids to construct reverse micelles for high-resolution NMR studies of proteins. • Initial optimization of encapsulation conditions proceeds through visual assessment, with dynamic light scattering (DLS) to measure size distribution, and NMR to observe protein behavior. • Membrane-interacting proteins are encapsulated in their membrane-bound state. Proteins that do not interact with membranes are housed in their water-solubilized state. • Structural, functional, and inhibitory studies may be performed on native reverse micelle-encapsulated proteins.

利用原生反向胶束研究膜蛋白-脂质相互作用的核磁共振方法
外周膜蛋白(PMPs)是膜相关蛋白的一个亚群,它们是水溶性的,通常可逆地与膜结合以发挥其功能。这些蛋白质在水溶液状态下已被广泛研究,但往往缺乏对这些蛋白质在膜结合状态下的高分辨率结构和功能研究。目前,核磁共振(NMR)是研究这些相对较小的蛋白质和结构域的最佳方法之一,但目前的模型存在一些缺点,无法全面了解 PMP 与膜和脂质的相互作用。胶束、双胞和纳米盘都可用于 NMR 观察,但它们都基于合成脂质,可能会破坏蛋白质的稳定性,或者体积太大,无法进行直接的结构分析。本方案介绍了一种使用天然脂质形成反向胶束的方法,在此称为原生反向胶束。该技术允许 PMP 嵌入天然脂质外壳中,外壳周围是在烷烃溶剂中溶解的小水核。PMP 嵌入脂质外壳可模拟与细胞膜的结合。在这里,大豆、牛心和猪脑中的天然脂质与正十二烷基膦酰胆碱(DPC)一起用于包裹浓缩或干燥蛋白质中的 PMP,从而形成可通过动态光散射和核磁共振确认的反胶束。该方案可在准确的生物环境中获得 PMP 与膜脂相互作用的高质量 NMR 数据。主要特点 - 本方案介绍了利用天然脂质构建反向胶束以进行蛋白质的高分辨率 NMR 研究。- 通过目测评估对封装条件进行初步优化,用动态光散射(DLS)测量粒度分布,用 NMR 观察蛋白质的行为。- 与膜相互作用的蛋白质以膜结合状态封装。不与膜发生相互作用的蛋白质则以水溶解状态保存。- 可对原生反胶束封装蛋白质进行结构、功能和抑制研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
1.50
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