4.4 Article

Magnetically Aligned Lipid Bilayers with High Cholesterol for Solid-State NMR of Membrane Proteins

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 61, Issue 15, Pages 1561-1571

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biochem.2c00262

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [GM122501]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Phospholipid bicelles are valuable membrane model systems for studying membrane proteins and n-dodecyl-beta-D-melibioside (DDMB) can produce magnetically alignable lipid bilayers with high cholesterol content.
Phospholipid bicelles are valuable membrane model systems to study membrane proteins by NMR and other physicochemical techniques. The range of bicelle compositions that are compatible with uniaxial alignment of the lipid bilayers in a magnetic field is still limited with regard to the addition of large amounts (>20%) of cholesterol and/or sphingolipids. Here, we demonstrate that n-dodecyl-beta-D-melibioside (DDMB), which was recently introduced as a detergent to produce sphingolipid-cholesterol-rich isotropic bicelles for solution NMR studies, can also be used to produce magnetically alignable lipid bilayers with high cholesterol content that are well suited for solid-state NMR of membrane proteins. Remarkably, DDMB enables the preparation of high q bicelles that contain 50% mol cholesterol while retaining their ability to form a stable, well-aligned liquid crystalline bilayer phase in a magnetic field. We show that the intact 46-residue membrane-bound form of Pf1 bacteriophage coat protein and a truncated construct of the membrane protein Vpu from HIV-1 (residues 2-30) in DDMB bicelles are well aligned and undergo fast and uniaxial rotational diffusion about the bilayer normal, similarly to what is observed in other bicelle and macrodisc systems. We also demonstrate a spectroscopic method that measures the increase in the thickness of DMPC bilayers that results from the addition of cholesterol, using the PISA-wheel spectral patterns of trans-membrane helices as a molecular goniometer. For example, we find that the hydrophobic thickness of DMPC bilayers is increased by approximately 2.5 angstrom in the presence of 35% mol cholesterol.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available