4.5 Review

Xenopus Oocytes as a Powerful Cellular Model to Study Foreign Fully-Processed Membrane Proteins

Journal

MEMBRANES
Volume 12, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/membranes12100986

Keywords

Xenopus oocytes; microtransplantation method; membrane proteins; lipid-protein interactions; functional assays of mature proteins

Funding

  1. AEI/FEDER, UE [SAF2017-82977-P]
  2. Universidad de Alicante (Spain) [GRE17-01]
  3. MINECO [PGC2018-093505-B-I00]

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Xenopus oocytes have been successfully used as a model for studying membrane proteins, particularly receptors, ion channels, and transporters. By transplanting foreign membrane proteins, researchers have gained insights into their function, modifications, and lipid regulation. This approach has also allowed for the study of membrane proteins from various sources.
The use of Xenopus oocytes in electrophysiological and biophysical research constitutes a long and successful story, providing major advances to the knowledge of the function and modulation of membrane proteins, mostly receptors, ion channels, and transporters. Earlier reports showed that these cells are capable of correctly expressing heterologous proteins after injecting the corresponding mRNA or cDNA. More recently, the Xenopus oocyte has become an outstanding host-cell model to carry out detailed studies on the function of fully-processed foreign membrane proteins after their microtransplantation to the oocyte. This review focused on the latter overall process of transplanting foreign membrane proteins to the oocyte after injecting plasma membranes or purified and reconstituted proteins. This experimental approach allows for the study of both the function of mature proteins, with their native stoichiometry and post-translational modifications, and their putative modulation by surrounding lipids, mostly when the protein is purified and reconstituted in lipid matrices of defined composition. Remarkably, this methodology enables functional microtransplantation to the oocyte of membrane receptors, ion channels, and transporters from different sources including human post-mortem tissue banks. Despite the large progress achieved over the last decades on the structure, function, and modulation of neuroreceptors and ion channels in healthy and pathological tissues, many unanswered questions remain and, most likely, Xenopus oocytes will continue to help provide valuable responses.

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