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Self-Assembly Behavior and Application of Terphenyl-Cored Trimaltosides for Membrane-Protein Studies: Impact of Detergent Hydrophobic Group Geometry on Protein Stability

Authors
Ehsan, MuhammadDu, YangMortensen, Jonas S.Hariharan, ParameswaranQu, QianhuiGhani, LubnaDas, ManabendraGrethen, AnneByrne, BernadetteSkiniotis, GeorgiosKeller, SandroLoland, Claus J.Guan, LanKobilka, 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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ERICA 첨단융합대학 (ERICA 바이오나노공학전공)
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