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Article Dans Une Revue Molecular Membrane Biology Année : 2011

A class of mild surfactants that keep integral membranes proteins water-soluble for functional studies and crystallization

Résumé

Mixed protein-surfactant micelles are used for in vitro studies and 3D crystallization when solutions of pure, monodisperse integral membrane proteins are required. However, many membrane proteins undergo inactivation when transferred from the biomembrane into micelles of conventional surfactants with alkyl chains as hydrophobic moieties. Here we describe the development of surfactants with rigid, saturated or aromatic hydrocarbon groups as hydrophobic parts. Their stabilizing properties are demonstrated with three different integral membrane proteins. The temperature at which 50% of the binding sites for specific ligands are lost is used as a measure of stability and dodecyl-beta beta-D-maltoside (''C12-b-M'') as a reference for conventional surfactants. One surfactant increased the stability of two different G protein-coupled receptors and the human Patched protein receptor by approximately 10 degrees A degrees C compared to C12-b-M. Another surfactant yielded the highest stabilization of the human Patched protein receptor compared to C12-b-M (13 degrees A degrees C) but was inferior for the G protein-coupled receptors. In addition, one of the surfactants was successfully used to stabilize and crystallize the cytochrome b(6) f complex from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. The structure was solved to the same resolution as previously reported in C12-b-M.

Domaines

Chimie

Dates et versions

hal-01331169 , version 1 (13-06-2016)

Identifiants

Citer

J. Hovers, M. Potschies, Ange Polidori, Bernard Pucci, Simon Raynal, et al.. A class of mild surfactants that keep integral membranes proteins water-soluble for functional studies and crystallization. Molecular Membrane Biology, 2011, ⟨10.3109/09687688.2011.552440⟩. ⟨hal-01331169⟩
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