Self-Assembly Behavior and Application of Terphenyl-Cored Trimaltosides for Membrane-Protein Studies: Impact of Detergent Hydrophobic Group Geometry on Protein Stability
- Authors
- Ehsan, Muhammad; Du, Yang; Mortensen, Jonas S.; Hariharan, Parameswaran; Qu, Qianhui; Ghani, Lubna; Das, Manabendra; Grethen, Anne; Byrne, Bernadette; Skiniotis, Georgios; Keller, Sandro; Loland, Claus J.; Guan, Lan; Kobilka, Brian K.; Chae, Pil Seok
- Issue Date
- Sep-2019
- Publisher
- John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
- Keywords
- amphiphiles; glycolipids; membrane proteins; pi-interactions; self-assembly
- Citation
- Chemistry - A European Journal, v.25, no.49, pp.11545 - 11554
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- Chemistry - A European Journal
- Volume
- 25
- Number
- 49
- Start Page
- 11545
- End Page
- 11554
- URI
- https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/erica/handle/2021.sw.erica/2152
- DOI
- 10.1002/chem.201902468
- ISSN
- 0947-6539
- Abstract
- Amphipathic agents are widely used in various fields including biomedical sciences. Micelle-forming detergents are particularly useful for in vitro membrane-protein characterization. As many conventional detergents are limited in their ability to stabilize membrane proteins, it is necessary to develop novel detergents to facilitate membrane-protein research. In the current study, we developed novel trimaltoside detergents with an alkyl pendant-bearing terphenyl unit as a hydrophobic group, designated terphenyl-cored maltosides (TPMs). We found that the geometry of the detergent hydrophobic group substantially impacts detergent self-assembly behavior, as well as detergent efficacy for membrane-protein stabilization. TPM-Vs, with a bent terphenyl group, were superior to the linear counterparts (TPM-Ls) at stabilizing multiple membrane proteins. The favorable protein stabilization efficacy of these bent TPMs is likely associated with a binding mode with membrane proteins distinct from conventional detergents and facial amphiphiles. When compared to n-dodecyl-beta-d-maltoside (DDM), most TPMs were superior or comparable to this gold standard detergent at stabilizing membrane proteins. Notably, TPM-L3 was particularly effective at stabilizing the human beta(2) adrenergic receptor (beta(2)AR), a G-protein coupled receptor, and its complex with G(s) protein. Thus, the current study not only provides novel detergent tools that are useful for membrane-protein study, but also suggests a critical role for detergent hydrophobic group geometry in governing detergent efficacy.
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