4.5 Article

Self-Assembly of Polymer-Encased Lipid Nanodiscs and Membrane Protein Reconstitution

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume 123, Issue 21, Pages 4562-4570

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.9b03681

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Funding

  1. NIH [AG048934]
  2. International Collaborative Research Program of Institute for Protein Research, Osaka University [ICR-18-02]

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The absence of detergent and curvature makes nanodiscs excellent membrane mimetics. The lack of structural and mechanistic model of polymerencapsulated lipid nanodiscs limits their use in the study of the structure, dynamics, and functions of membrane proteins. In this study, we parameterized and optimized the coarse-graining (CG) bead mapping for two differently charged and functionalized copolymers, containing styrene-maleic acid (SMAEA) and polymethacrylate (PMAQA), for the Martini force-field framework and showed nanodisc formation (<8 nm diameter) on a time scale of tens of microseconds using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Structural models of similar to 2.0 or 4.8 kDa PMAQA and similar to 2.2 kDa SMAEA polymer-based lipid nanodiscs highlight the importance of the polymer chemical structure, size, and polymer-lipid ratio in the optimization of the nanodisc structure. The ideal spatial arrangement of polymers in nanodiscs, nanodisc size, and thermal stability obtained from our MD simulation correlates well with the experimental observations. The polymer- nanodiscs were tested for the reconstitution of single-pass or multipass transmembrane proteins. We expect this study to be useful in the development of novel polymer-based lipid nanodiscs and for the structural studies of membrane proteins.

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