4.7 Article

The membrane-bound conformation of α-lactalbumin studied by NMR-monitored 1H exchange

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 321, Issue 1, Pages 99-110

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S0022-2836(02)00565-X

Keywords

bovine alpha-lactalbumin; membrane binding; NMR; hydrogen exchange; small unilamellar vesicles

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The interaction of bovine alpha-lactalbumin (BLA) with negatively charged phospholipid bilayers was studied by NMR monitored H-1 exchange to characterize the conformational transition that enables a water-soluble protein to associate with and partially insert into a membrane. BLA was allowed to exchange in deuterated buffer in the absence (reference) and the presence (membrane-bound) of acidic liposomes at pH 4.5, experimental conditions that allow efficient protein-membrane interaction. After adjusting the pH to 6.0, to dissociate the protein from the membrane, reference and membrane-released samples of BLA were analysed by (F1) band-selective homonuclear decoupled total correlation spectroscopy in the alphaH-NH region. The overall exchange behaviour of the membrane-bound state is molten globule-like, suggesting an overall destabilization of the polypeptide. Nevertheless, the backbone amide protons of residues R10, L12, C77, K94, K98, V99 and W104 show significant protection against solvent exchange in the membrane-bound protein. We propose a mechanism for the association of BLA with negatively charged membranes that includes initial protonation of acidic side-chains at the membrane interface, and formation of an interacting site with the membrane which involves helixes A and C. In the next step these helices would slide away from each other, adopting a parallel orientation to the membrane, and would rotate to maximize the interaction between their hydrophobic residues and the lipid bilayer. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

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