| Literature DB >> 32494365 |
Abstract
Membrane proteins are an important class of macromolecules found in all living organisms and many of them serve as important drug targets. In order to understand their biological and biochemical functions and to exploit them for structure-based drug design, high-resolution and accurate structures of membrane proteins are needed, but are still rarely available, e.g., predominantly from X-ray crystallography, and more recently from single particle cryo-EM - an increasingly powerful tool for membrane protein structure determination. However, while protein-lipid interactions play crucial roles for the structural and functional integrity of membrane proteins, for historical reasons and due to technological limitations, until recently, the primary method for membrane protein crystallization has relied on detergents. Bicelle and lipid cubic phase (LCP) methods have also been used for membrane protein crystallization, but the first step requires detergent extraction of the protein from its native cell membrane. The resulting, crystal structures have been occasionally questioned, but such concerns were generally dismissed as accidents or ignored. However, even a hint of controversy indicates that methodological drawbacks in such structural research may exist. In the absence of caution, structures determined using these methods are often assumed to be correct, which has led to surprising hypotheses for their mechanisms of action. In this communication, several examples of structural studies on membrane proteins or complexes will be discussed: Resistance-Nodulation-Division (RND) family transporters, microbial rhodopsins, Tryptophan-rich Sensory Proteins (TSPO), and Energy-Coupling Factor (ECF) type ABC transporters. These analyses should focus the attention of membrane protein structural biologists on the potential problems in structure determination relying on detergent-based methods. Furthermore, careful examination of membrane proteins in their native cell environments by biochemical and biophysical techniques is warranted, and completely detergent-free systems for membrane protein research are crucially needed.Entities:
Keywords: AcrB; Energy-Coupling Factor type ABC transporter; SMALP; TSPO; detergent; membrane protein; native cell membrane nanoparticles system; rhodopsin
Year: 2020 PMID: 32494365 PMCID: PMC7269168 DOI: 10.3390/cryst10020086
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crystals (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4352 Impact factor: 2.589
Figure 1.Crystal structures and cryo-EM structures of AcrB. A. Crystal structure of wild type AcrB with perfect three-fold symmetry. Sample was treated with detergent causing natural lipid molecules within the transmembrane domain to be washed out during sample preparation (PDB: 6BAJ). B. Crystal structure of AcrB D407A mutant (PDB: 6CSX). Sample was prepared with detergents. Once the mutation was made, the crystal structure showed a dramatically different conformation, indicated by the significantly smaller distances between the three-fold symmetrical F386 residues from 16 Å (Figure 1A) to 6 Å (Figure 1B). C. Single particle cryo-EM structure of wild type AcrB solved using the native cell membrane nanoparticle system that preserved the native lipid bilayer within the transmembrane domain (the same structure was used in generating Figures E, F, and G from each of the three sides of the asymmetric trimeric subunits). D. Single particle cryo-EM structure of AcrBD407 mutant prepared with NCMNS. The inter-F386 distances within the wild type AcrB and the mutant AcrB show no observable differences. E. F386 side chain from AcrB subunit A tightly associated with the lipid bilayer patch. F. F386 side chain from AcrB subunit B tightly associated with the lipid bilayer patch. G. F386 side chain from AcrB subunit C tightly associated with the lipid bilayer patch. Note: Phe386 is displayed as red colored sphere.
Figure 2.Controversial oligomers of membrane proteins crystallized in different conditions. (A). Bacteriorhodopsin monomer in the bicelle crystal. (B). Rhodopsin dimer in LCP crystals. (C). Rhodopsin trimer in LCP crystals. (D). Rhodopsin pentamer in detergent crystals. (E). Rhodopsin hexamer in LCP crystals. (F). Bacillius cereus TSPO monomer in LCP crystals. (G). Bacillus cereus TSPO dimer in LCP crystals. (H). Rhoder bacterial TSPO dimer in LCP crystals.
Crystal structures of microbial rhodopsins
| Protein/PDB ID | Source Organism | Expression Organism | Detergent | Oligomer | Crystal Environment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bacteriorhodopsin/PDB: 1BRD | Octylglucoside, dodecyl trimethyl ammonium chloride | Trimer | 2D crystal | ||
| Bacteriorhodopsin/PDB: 1KME | Octylglucoside | Monomer | Bicelle | ||
| Archaerhodopsin-3/PDB: 6GUY | Not published | Monomer | LCP | ||
| Halorhodopsin,/PDB: 5AHZ | Trimer | Detergent solution | |||
| Dimer | LCP | ||||
| Triton X-100, n-Dodecyl-β-D-maltopyranoside | Pentamer | LCP | |||
| blue light-absorbing proteorhodopsin/PDB: 4JQ6 | Uncultured bacterium | Hexamer | Bicelle |
Figure 3.Crystal structures of ECF type of ABC transporter. (A). Crystal structure of the S component of the ECF type ThiT transporter. In the asymmetric unit, two monomers formed an artificial dimer caused by the lipid environment being damaged by detergents. (B). Crystal structure of the ECF type Folate transporter S component. Three S subunits associated into an artificial trimer through two very different dimeric interfaces because of detergent damage to the lipid environment. (C). Transmembrane region analysis with PPM of one S component of the folate transporter. (D). Transmembrane region analysis with PPM of an artificial S component dimer of the folate transporter. The relative orientation of the same S component when analyzed as a monomer is dramatically different from the analysis of the artificial dimer; in the artificial dimer the St component is tilted about 45°. (E). Transmembrane region analysis of ThiT artificial dimer. In this analysis, one S subunit has a normal orientation, however, the other subunit is almost parallel to the cell membrane and strikingly almost half of the S component is outside of the cell membrane. (F). Transmembrane region analysis of a single S component of ThiT, displaying one parallel S component in the same orientation as seen in Figure 3E; however, in the single S component analysis, we see the S component displaying a normal orientation. (G). PPM analysis of the transmembrane region of an ECF type ABC transporter. The T component is in a normal orientation within the calculated transmembrane region; however, the S component is parallel to the transmembrane region. This situation is strikingly similar to the situation displayed in Figure E. Since the dimer in Figure E is an artifact caused by detergent, the evidence suggests the crystallographic structure of the ECF transporter complex is an artifact. (H). ATPase dimer in an open state conformation without ATP or AMPPNP binding. (I). ATPase dimer in a closed state conformation with AMPPNP binding. Binding of AMPPNP induces the closed state conformation of the dimer. (J). ECF transporter complex apo state without ATP or AMPPNP binding to the ATPase domain, ATPase is in an open state conformation. (K). ECF transporter complexed with AMPPNP binding to the ATPase domain, however, the ATPase is still in an open state conformation. This is controversial since the ATPase binding to AMPPNP should induce a closed state conformation. The reason could be that the artificial complex is structurally and functionally aberrant, so AMPPNP could not induce the expected conformational change.