4.8 Article

Structure and activity of lipid bilayer within a membrane-protein transporter

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1812526115

Keywords

AcrB; cryo-EM; nanoparticle; phospholipid; styrene maleic acid copolymer

Funding

  1. Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) School of Pharmacy
  2. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  3. NIH [P41 GM116799, R01 GM29169, R01 GM107462, GM103310, S10 OD019994-01]
  4. Public Health Service [DA024022, DA044855]
  5. Simons Foundation [349247]
  6. Department of Medicinal Chemistry

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Membrane proteins function in native cell membranes, but extraction into isolated particles is needed for many biochemical and structural analyses. Commonly used detergent-extraction methods destroy naturally associated lipid bilayers. Here, we devised a detergent-free method for preparing cell-membrane nanoparticles to study the multidrug exporter AcrB, by cryo-EM at 3.2-A resolution. We discovered a remarkably well-organized lipid-bilayer structure associated with transmembrane domains of the AcrB trimer. This bilayer patch comprises 24 lipid molecules; inner leaflet chains are packed in a hexagonal array, whereas the outer leaflet has highly irregular but ordered packing. Protein side chains interact with both leaflets and participate in the hexagonal pattern. We suggest that the lipid bilayer supports and harmonizes peristaltic motions through AcrB trimers. In AcrB D407A, a putative proton-relay mutant, lipid bilayer buttresses protein interactions lost in crystal structures after detergent-solubilization. Our detergent-free system preserves lipid-protein interactions for visualization and should be broadly applicable.

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