Inherently Tunable Electrostatic Assembly of Membrane Proteins (original) (raw)
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The directed cooperative assembly of proteorhodopsin into 2D and 3D polarized arrays
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
Proteorhodopsin is the membrane protein used by marine bacterioplankton as a light-driven proton pump. Here, we describe a rapid cooperative assembly process directed by universal electrostatic interactions that spontaneously organizes proteorhodopsin molecules into ordered arrays with well defined orientation and packing density. We demonstrate the charge density-matching mechanism that selectively controls the assembly process. The interactions among different components in the system are tuned by varying their charge densities to yield different organized transmembrane protein arrays: (i) a bacteriorhodopsin purple membrane-like structure where proteorhodopsin molecules are cooperatively arranged with charged lipids into a 2D hexagonal lattice; (ii) selected liquid-crystalline states in which crystalline lamellae made up of the coassembled proteorhodopsin and charged lipid molecules are coupled three-dimensionally with polarized proteorhodopsin orientation persisting through the macroscopic scale. Understanding this rapid electrostatically driven assembly process sheds light on organizing membrane proteins in general, which is a prerequisite for membrane protein structural and mechanistic studies as well as in vitro applications.
Lipid bilayer composition can influence the orientation of proteorhodopsin in artificial membranes
Artificial membrane systems allow researchers to study the structure and function of membrane proteins in a matrix that approximates their natural environment and to integrate these proteins in ex vivo devices such as electronic biosensors, thin-film protein arrays, or biofuel cells. Given that most membrane proteins have vectorial functions, both functional studies and applications require effective control over protein orientation within a lipid bilayer. In this work, we explored the role of the bilayer surface charge in determining transmembrane protein orientation and functionality during formation of proteoliposomes. We reconstituted a model vectorial ion pump, proteorhodopsin, in liposomes of opposite charges and varying charge densities and determined the resultant protein orientation. Antibody-binding assay and proteolysis of proteoliposomes showed physical evidence of preferential orientation, and functional assays verified the vectorial nature of ion transport in this system. Our results indicate that the manipulation of lipid composition can indeed control orientation of an asymmetrically charged membrane protein, proteorhodopsin, in liposomes.
Nature communications, 2016
An important goal in synthetic biology is the assembly of biomimetic cell-like structures, which combine multiple biological components in synthetic lipid vesicles. A key limiting assembly step is the incorporation of membrane proteins into the lipid bilayer of the vesicles. Here we present a simple method for delivery of membrane proteins into a lipid bilayer within 5 min. Fusogenic proteoliposomes, containing charged lipids and membrane proteins, fuse with oppositely charged bilayers, with no requirement for detergent or fusion-promoting proteins, and deliver large, fragile membrane protein complexes into the target bilayers. We demonstrate the feasibility of our method by assembling a minimal electron transport chain capable of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) synthesis, combining Escherichia coli F1Fo ATP-synthase and the primary proton pump bo3-oxidase, into synthetic lipid vesicles with sizes ranging from 100 nm to ∼10 μm. This provides a platform for the combination of multiple s...
Membrane-protein stability in a phospholipid-based crystallization medium
Journal of Structural Biology, 2006
Protein stability is a crucial factor to consider when attempting to crystallize integral membrane proteins. Cubic phase, or in meso, lipid-bilayer crystallization media are thought to provide native-like environments that should facilitate membrane protein crystallization by helping to stabilize the native protein conformation for the duration of the crystallization process. While excellent crystals of bacteriorhodopsin (bR) and other Halobacterial rhodopsins have been obtained in lipid-bilayer gels formed with monoglycerides, success remains elusive in the general application of such media to other membrane proteins. Additionally, we have noted that some mutants of bR are highly unstable in gels formed with monoolein. Phosphatidylethanolamines (PE) and derivatives of PE represent another class of lipids that can form connected-bilayer gels. When wildtype bR and a labile bR mutant were reconstituted into this phospholipid gel, spectroscopy showed that the protein is both more stable and has improved conformational homogeneity as compared to gels formed using monoolein. In addition, we demonstrate that well-diVracting crystals of bR can be grown from a PE-based crystallization medium. Since most proteins lack a stability-indicating chromophore and other structure-based analytical techniques are poorly compatible with the lipid gel, we developed a generally-applicable spectroscopic technique based on the intrinsic Xuorescence of tryptophan residues. This Xuorescence assay makes possible the rapid evaluation of lipid gels as media for the crystallization of membrane proteins.
Membrane Protein Selectively Oriented on Solid Support and Reconstituted into a Lipid Membrane
Langmuir, 2007
Mimetic functional membranes on solid support are now emerging for the development of membrane biosensor or for the study of membrane-mediated processes and should have an important impact on biodiagnostics. We established a method to reconstitute a membrane protein into a lipid membrane in a selective orientation on a solid support. Membrane protein OprM, a component of OprM-MexA-MexB multidrug efflux pump, solubilized in detergent was immobilized via its extracellular domain on aminosilane-modified silica surface. The oriented protein was reconstituted into a lipid membrane by detergent removal. The membrane protein reconstitution process carried out on silica nanoparticles and on planar silica surfaces was followed by cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) and quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation monitoring (QCM-D) respectively. The selective protein orientation on aminosilanemodified silica surface was assessed by cryo-EM and was compared to the nonspecific protein deposition on silica surface. Finally, the binding of MexA, a periplasmic component of the tripartite efflux complex, was monitored with QCM-D on the oriented OprM protein monolayer. The large adsorbed mass gave a direct evidence of the high affinity of MexA with the periplasmic helical part of OprM.
Self-assembling peptides form nanodiscs that stabilize membrane proteins
Soft Matter, 2014
New methods to handle membrane bound proteins, e.g. G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs), are highly desirable. Recently, apoliprotein A1 (ApoA1) based lipoprotein particles have emerged as a new platform for studying membrane proteins, and it has been shown that they can self-assemble in combination with phospholipids to form discoidal shaped particles that can stabilize membrane proteins. In the present study, we have investigated an ApoA1 mimetic peptide with respect to its solution structure when in complex with phospholipids. This was achieved using a powerful combination of small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) and small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) supported by coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations. The detailed structure of the discs was determined in unprecedented detail and it was found that they adopt a discoidal structure very similar to the ApoA1 based nanodiscs. We furthermore show that, like the ApoA1 and derived nanodiscs, these peptide discs can accommodate and stabilize a membrane protein. Finally, we exploit their dynamic properties and show that the 18A discs may be used for transferring membrane proteins and associated phospholipids directly and gently into phospholipid nanodiscs.
The role of electrostatics in protein-membrane interactions
Biochimica et biophysica acta, 2006
Many experimental, structural and computational studies have established the importance of nonspecific electrostatics as a driving force for peripheral membrane association. Here we focus on this component of protein/membrane interactions by using examples ranging from phosphoinositide signaling to retroviral assembly. We stress the utility of the collaboration of experiment and theory in identifying and quantifying the role of electrostatics not only in contributing to membrane association, but also in affecting subcellular targeting, in the control of membrane binding, and in the organization of proteins and lipids at membrane surfaces.
Self-assembled lipid and membrane protein polyhedral nanoparticles
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013
Significance An alternate strategy to tubular or 2D crystals for high-resolution membrane protein structure determination by electron microscopy has been developed. Homogeneous polyhedral proteoliposomes of defined symmetry were prepared from the Escherichia coli mechanosensitive channel of small conductance (MscS). These membrane protein polyhedral nanoparticles (MPPNs) were analyzed by electron cryomicroscopy that established that they contain 24 MscS heptamers related by octahedral symmetry wherein the individual MscS conformation resembles the nonconducting state. We further demonstrate the development of a membraneless microfluidic device that can facilitate the preparation of a variety of MPPNs, with future applications including structural studies of membrane proteins in the presence of transmembrane gradients, as well as drug delivery carriers or as templates for inorganic nanoparticle formation.
Protein Interactions and Membrane Geometry
Biophysical Journal, 2003
The difficulty in growing crystals for x-ray diffraction analysis has hindered the determination of membrane protein structures. However, this is changing with the advent of a new method for growing high quality membrane protein crystals from the lipidic cubic phase. Although successful, the mechanism underlying this method has remained unclear. Here, we present a theoretical analysis of the process. We show that it is energetically favorable for proteins embedded in the highly curved cubic phase to cluster together in flattened regions of the membrane. This stabilizes the lamellar phase, permitting its outgrowth from the cubic phase. A kinetic barrier-crossing model is developed to determine the free energy barrier to crystallization from the time-dependent growth of protein clusters. Determining the values of key parameters provides both a rational basis for optimizing the experimental procedure for membrane proteins that have not yet been crystallized and insight into the analogous cubic to lamellar transitions in cells. We also discuss the implications of this mechanism for protein sorting at the exit sites of the Golgi and endoplasmic reticulum and the general stabilization of membrane structures.