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Lipid‐like Peptides can Stabilize Integral Membrane Proteins for Biophysical and Structural Studies
Author(s) -
Veith Katharina,
Martinez Molledo Maria,
Almeida Hernandez Yasser,
Josts Inokentijs,
Nitsche Julius,
Löw Christian,
Tidow Henning
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
chembiochem
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.05
H-Index - 126
eISSN - 1439-7633
pISSN - 1439-4227
DOI - 10.1002/cbic.201700235
Subject(s) - integral membrane protein , membrane protein , membrane , protein–lipid interaction , peripheral membrane protein , lipid bilayer , biophysics , structural biology , chemistry , biochemistry , biology
A crucial bottleneck in membrane protein structural biology is the difficulty in identifying a detergent that can maintain the stability and functionality of integral membrane proteins (IMPs). Detergents are poor membrane mimics, and their common use in membrane protein crystallography may be one reason for the challenges in obtaining high‐resolution crystal structures of many IMP families. Lipid‐like peptides (LLPs) have detergent‐like properties and have been proposed as alternatives for the solubilization of G protein‐coupled receptors and other membrane proteins. Here, we systematically analyzed the stabilizing effect of LLPs on integral membrane proteins of different families. We found that LLPs could significantly stabilize detergent‐solubilized IMPs in vitro. This stabilizing effect depended on the chemical nature of the LLP and the intrinsic stability of a particular IMP in the detergent. Our results suggest that screening a subset of LLPs is sufficient to stabilize a particular IMP, which can have a substantial impact on the crystallization and quality of the crystal.