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Development of 1,3-acetonedicarboxylate-derived glucoside amphiphiles (ACAs) for membrane protein studyopen access

Authors
Lee, Ho JinEhsan, MuhammadZhang, XiangKatsube, SatoshiMunk, Chastine F.Wang, HaoqingAhmed, WaqarKumar, AshwaniByrne, BernadetteLoland, Claus J.Guan, LanLiu, XiangyuChae, Pil Seok
Issue Date
May-2022
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
Citation
Chemical Science, v.13, no.19, pp 5750 - 5759
Pages
10
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Chemical Science
Volume
13
Number
19
Start Page
5750
End Page
5759
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/erica/handle/2021.sw.erica/107872
DOI
10.1039/d2sc00539e
ISSN
2041-6520
2041-6539
Abstract
Detergents are extensively used for membrane protein manipulation. Membrane proteins solubilized in conventional detergents are prone to denaturation and aggregation, rendering downstream characterization of these bio-macromolecules difficult. Although many amphiphiles have been developed to overcome the limited efficacy of conventional detergents for protein stabilization, only a handful of novel detergents have so far proved useful for membrane protein structural studies. Here, we introduce 1,3-acetonedicarboxylate-derived amphiphiles (ACAs) containing three glucose units and two alkyl chains as head and tail groups, respectively. The ACAs incorporate two different patterns of alkyl chain attachment to the core detergent unit, generating two sets of amphiphiles: ACA-As (asymmetrically alkylated) and ACA-Ss (symmetrically alkylated). The difference in the attachment pattern of the detergent alkyl chains resulted in minor variation in detergent properties such as micelle size, critical micelle concentration, and detergent behaviors toward membrane protein extraction and stabilization. In contrast, the impact of the detergent alkyl chain length on protein stability was marked. The two C11 variants (ACA-AC11 and ACA-SC11) were most effective at stabilizing the tested membrane proteins. The current study not only introduces new glucosides as tools for membrane protein study, but also provides detergent structure-property relationships important for future design of novel amphiphiles.
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COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING SCIENCES > DEPARTMENT OF BIONANO ENGINEERING > 1. Journal Articles

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ERICA 공학대학 (DEPARTMENT OF BIONANO ENGINEERING)
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