4.3 Article

From polymer chemistry to structural biology: The development of SMA and related amphipathic polymers for membrane protein extraction and solubilisation

Journal

CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS OF LIPIDS
Volume 221, Issue -, Pages 167-175

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemphyslip.2019.03.008

Keywords

Lipodisq; Lipid nanoparticles; SMA poylmer; Amphipathic polymers; Drug delivery; Structural biology; Polymer chemistry; Membrane protein; Hypercoiling amphipathic polymers; Discoidal lipid nanoparticles; Polymer labelling; SMALP; SMA lipid nanoparticles; Native nanodiscs; Nanodiscs; DIBMA

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Nanoparticles assembled with poly(styrene-maleic acid) copolymers, identified in the literature as Lipodisq, SMALPs or Native Nanodisc, are routinely used as membrane mimetics to stabilise protein structures in their native conformation. To date, transmembrane proteins of varying complexity (up to 8 beta strands or 48 alpha helices) and of a range of molecular weights (from 27 kDa up to 500 kDa) have been incorporated into this particle system for structural and functional studies. SMA and related amphipathic polymers have become versatile components of the biochemist's tool kit for the stabilisation, extraction and structural characterization of membrane proteins by techniques including cryo-EM and X-ray crystallography. Lipodisq formation does not require the use of conventional detergents and thus avoids their associated detrimental consequences. Here the development of this technology, from its fundamental concept and design to the diverse range of experimental methodologies to which it can now be applied, will be reviewed.

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