High-throughput Crystallization of Membrane Proteins Using the Lipidic Bicelle Method

被引:20
|
作者
Ujwal, Rachna [1 ]
Abramson, Jeff [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Los Angeles, UCLA DOE Inst Genom & Prote, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA
[2] Univ Calif Los Angeles, David Geffen Sch Med, Dept Physiol, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA
来源
JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS | 2012年 / 59期
关键词
Molecular Biology; Issue; 59; membrane proteins crystallization; bicelle; lipidic crystallization;
D O I
10.3791/3383
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Membrane proteins (MPs) play a critical role in many physiological processes such as pumping specific molecules across the otherwise impermeable membrane bilayer that surrounds all cells and organelles. Alterations in the function of MPs result in many human diseases and disorders; thus, an intricate understanding of their structures remains a critical objective for biological research. However, structure determination of MPs remains a significant challenge often stemming from their hydrophobicity. MPs have substantial hydrophobic regions embedded within the bilayer. Detergents are frequently used to solubilize these proteins from the bilayer generating a protein-detergent micelle that can then be manipulated in a similar manner as soluble proteins. Traditionally, crystallization trials proceed using a protein-detergent mixture, but they often resist crystallization or produce crystals of poor quality. These problems arise due to the detergent's inability to adequately mimic the bilayer resulting in poor stability and heterogeneity. In addition, the detergent shields the hydrophobic surface of the MP reducing the surface area available for crystal contacts. To circumvent these drawbacks MPs can be crystallized in lipidic media, which more closely simulates their endogenous environment, and has recently become a de novo technique for MP crystallization. Lipidic cubic phase (LCP) is a three-dimensional lipid bilayer penetrated by an interconnected system of aqueous channels(1). Although monoolein is the lipid of choice, related lipids such as monopalmitolein and monovaccenin have also been used to make LCP2. MPs are incorporated into the LCP where they diffuse in three dimensions and feed crystal nuclei. A great advantage of the LCP is that the protein remains in a more native environment, but the method has a number of technical disadvantages including high viscosity (requiring specialized apparatuses) and difficulties in crystal visualization and manipulation(3,4). Because of these technical difficulties, we utilized another lipidic medium for crystallization-bicelles(5,6) (Figure 1). Bicelles are lipid/amphiphile mixtures formed by blending a phosphatidylcholine lipid (DMPC) with an amphiphile (CHAPSO) or a short-chain lipid (DHPC). Within each bicelle disc, the lipid molecules generate a bilayer while the amphiphile molecules line the apolar edges providing beneficial properties of both bilayers and detergents. Importantly, below their transition temperature, protein-bicelle mixtures have a reduced viscosity and are manipulated in a similar manner as detergent-solubilized MPs, making bicelles compatible with crystallization robots. Bicelles have been successfully used to crystallize several membrane proteins(5,7-11) (Table 1). This growing collection of proteins demonstrates the versatility of bicelles for crystallizing both alpha helical and beta sheet MPs from prokaryotic and eukaryotic sources. Because of these successes and the simplicity of high-throughput implementation, bicelles should be part of every membrane protein crystallographer's arsenal. In this video, we describe the bicelle methodology and provide a step-by-step protocol for setting up high-throughput crystallization trials of purified MPs using standard robotics.
引用
收藏
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Use of a Robot for High-throughput Crystallization of Membrane Proteins in Lipidic Mesophases
    Li, Dianfan
    Boland, Coiln
    Walsh, Kilian
    Caffrey, Martin
    JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS, 2012, (67):
  • [2] High-throughput automated system for crystallizing membrane proteins in lipidic mesophases
    Peddi, Avinash
    Muthusubramaniam, Lalitha
    Zheng, Yuan R.
    Cherezov, Vadim
    Misquitta, Yohann
    Caffrey, Martin
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON AUTOMATION SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING, 2007, 4 (02) : 129 - 140
  • [3] High-throughput SAXS analysis of lipidic mesophases for structural studies of membrane proteins
    Vlasov, A. V.
    Ivankov, O. I.
    Borshchevskiy, V. I.
    Ishchenko, A.
    Peng, L.
    Lee, S.
    Zhang, Q.
    Kuklin, A. I.
    Cherezov, V.
    FEBS JOURNAL, 2015, 282 : 234 - 234
  • [4] High-Throughput Cell-Free Screening of Eukaryotic Membrane Proteins in Lipidic Mimetics
    Bruni, Renato
    CURRENT PROTOCOLS, 2021, 2 (08):
  • [5] High-Throughput Detergent Exchange Screening Method for Membrane Protein Crystallization
    Lee, Jonas
    Kim, Sung-Hou
    FASEB JOURNAL, 2008, 22
  • [6] Crystallization of Membrane Proteins in Lipidic Mesophases
    Liu, Wei
    Cherezov, Vadim
    JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS, 2011, (49):
  • [7] The high-throughput production of membrane proteins
    Birch, James
    Quigley, Andrew
    EMERGING TOPICS IN LIFE SCIENCES, 2021, 5 (05) : 655 - 663
  • [8] Cubic Lipid Phase & Bicelle Crystallization of Membrane Proteins
    Luecke, Hartmut
    ACTA CRYSTALLOGRAPHICA A-FOUNDATION AND ADVANCES, 2010, 66 : S292 - S292
  • [9] A novel microseeding method for the crystallization of membrane proteins in lipidic cubic phase
    Kolek, Stefan Andrew
    Braeuning, Bastian
    Stewart, Patrick Douglas Shaw
    ACTA CRYSTALLOGRAPHICA SECTION F-STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY COMMUNICATIONS, 2016, 72 : 307 - 312
  • [10] A high-throughput strategy to screen 2D crystallization trials of membrane proteins
    Vink, Martin
    Derr, Kd
    Love, James
    Stokes, David L.
    Ubarretxena-Belandia, Than
    JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY, 2007, 160 (03) : 295 - 304