Literature DB >> 25177765

Polar interactions trump hydrophobicity in stabilizing the self-inserting membrane protein Mistic.

Jana Broecker1, Sebastian Fiedler, Katharina Gimpl, Sandro Keller.   

Abstract

Canonical integral membrane proteins are attached to lipid bilayers through hydrophobic transmembrane helices, whose topogenesis requires sophisticated insertion machineries. By contrast, membrane proteins that, for evolutionary or functional reasons, cannot rely on these machineries need to resort to driving forces other than hydrophobicity. A striking example is the self-inserting Bacillus subtilis protein Mistic, which is involved in biofilm formation and has found application as a fusion tag supporting the recombinant production and bilayer insertion of other membrane proteins. Although this unusual protein contains numerous polar and charged residues and lacks characteristic membrane-interaction motifs, it is tightly bound to membranes in vivo and membrane-mimetic systems in vitro. Therefore, we set out to quantify the contributions from polar and nonpolar interactions to the coupled folding and insertion of Mistic. To this end, we defined conditions under which the protein can be unfolded completely and reversibly from various detergent micelles by urea in a two-state equilibrium and where the unfolded state is independent of the detergent used for solubilizing the folded state. This enabled equilibrium unfolding experiments previously used for soluble and β-barrel membrane proteins, revealing that polar interactions with ionic and zwitterionic headgroups and, presumably, the interfacial dipole potential stabilize the protein much more efficiently than nonpolar interactions with the micelle core. These findings unveil the forces that allow a protein to tightly interact with a membrane-mimetic environment without major hydrophobic contributions and rationalize the differential suitability of detergents for the extraction and solubilization of Mistic-tagged membrane proteins.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25177765     DOI: 10.1021/ja5064795

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Chem Soc        ISSN: 0002-7863            Impact factor:   15.419


  7 in total

1.  Modulating bilayer mechanical properties to promote the coupled folding and insertion of an integral membrane protein.

Authors:  Michaela Herrmann; Bartholomäus Danielczak; Martin Textor; Jessica Klement; Sandro Keller
Journal:  Eur Biophys J       Date:  2015-05-29       Impact factor: 1.733

2.  Reversible Unfolding of Rhomboid Intramembrane Proteases.

Authors:  Rashmi Panigrahi; Elena Arutyunova; Pankaj Panwar; Katharina Gimpl; Sandro Keller; M Joanne Lemieux
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2016-03-29       Impact factor: 4.033

3.  Slow Interconversion in a Heterogeneous Unfolded-State Ensemble of Outer-Membrane Phospholipase A.

Authors:  Georg Krainer; Pablo Gracia; Erik Frotscher; Andreas Hartmann; Philip Gröger; Sandro Keller; Michael Schlierf
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2017-06-16       Impact factor: 4.033

4.  Mistic's membrane association and its assistance in overexpression of a human GPCR are independent processes.

Authors:  Jacopo Marino; Natalie Bordag; Sandro Keller; Oliver Zerbe
Journal:  Protein Sci       Date:  2014-10-25       Impact factor: 6.725

5.  Structural Thermodynamics of myr-Src(2-19) Binding to Phospholipid Membranes.

Authors:  Holger A Scheidt; Johannes Klingler; Daniel Huster; Sandro Keller
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2015-08-04       Impact factor: 4.033

6.  Not sorcery after all: Roles of multiple charged residues in membrane insertion of gasdermin-A3.

Authors:  Viktoria Korn; Kristyna Pluhackova
Journal:  Front Cell Dev Biol       Date:  2022-09-02

7.  Characterising protein/detergent complexes by triple-detection size-exclusion chromatography.

Authors:  Katharina Gimpl; Jessica Klement; Sandro Keller
Journal:  Biol Proced Online       Date:  2016-02-15       Impact factor: 3.244

  7 in total

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