| Literature DB >> 27343183 |
Thomas G Watkinson1, Antonio N Calabrese1, James R Ault1, Sheena E Radford2, Alison E Ashcroft3.
Abstract
Amphipols are a class of novel surfactants that are capable of stabilizing the native state of membrane proteins. They have been shown to be highly effective, in some cases more so than detergent micelles, at maintaining the structural integrity of membrane proteins in solution, and have shown promise as vehicles for delivering native membrane proteins into the gas phase for structural interrogation. Here, we use fast photochemical oxidation of proteins (FPOP), which irreversibly labels the side chains of solvent-accessible residues with hydroxyl radicals generated by laser photolysis of hydrogen peroxide, to compare the solvent accessibility of the outer membrane protein OmpT when solubilized with the amphipol A8-35 or with n-dodecyl-β-maltoside (DDM) detergent micelles. Using quantitative mass spectrometry analyses, we show that fast photochemical oxidation reveals differences in the extent of solvent accessibility of residues between the A8-35 and DDM solubilized states, providing a rationale for the increased stability of membrane proteins solubilized with amphipol compared with detergent micelles, as a result of additional intermolecular contacts. Graphical Abstract ᅟ.Entities:
Keywords: Amphipols; Detergents; Fast photochemical oxidation; Membrane proteins; Structural proteomics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27343183 PMCID: PMC5174144 DOI: 10.1007/s13361-016-1421-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Soc Mass Spectrom ISSN: 1044-0305 Impact factor: 3.109
Figure 1FPOP-MS work-flow. (i) Fast photochemical oxidation of proteins (FPOP) irreversibly labels solvent-accessible sites on protein side-chains; (ii) covalently modified proteins are digested to generate modified and unmodified tryptic peptides; (iii) LC-MS separation of these peptides is followed by (iv) MS/MS sequencing from which (v) a sequence can be derived for each peptide for identification of residue-specific modification sites. Modification sites are indicated by red circles
Figure 2LC-MS/MS analysis of the OmpT tryptic peptide T4 (residues 43-51) following FPOP. (a) Butterfly plot of LC-MS chromatograms showing unmodified T4 (blue peaks) in the absence of (upper trace) and following (lower trace) FPOP, and oxidized T4 (pink peak, lower trace, labelled “T4& FPOP”) following FPOP. U/A indicates an unassigned peak that was not identified as a modified or unmodified OmpT tryptic peptide; (b) and (c) show MS/MS spectra of unmodified and oxidized T4, respectively. The y” ions are labeled in red and the b ions in blue; the location of the modification site (Y44) is shown by the “Y&” symbol
Figure 3Tryptic peptides of OmpT (PDB 1I78 [29]) solubilized in DDM detergent micelles or in the amphipol A8-35 are modified to different degrees. Inset graphs show % peptide modified in DDM (blue) or in A8-35 (red) for four tryptic peptides of particular interest, and arrows (red and blue) indicate the respective residues that are modified in each peptide. Aromatic amino acid residues are shown in red. Residues towards the lower boundary of the transmembrane region are less readily labeled in DDM, whereas residues in the extra membrane region are shown to be less readily labeled in A8-35. Supplementary Figure S3 shows the location of the four tryptic peptides on the structure of OmpT