Conformationally flexible core-bearing detergents with a hydrophobic or hydrophilic pendant: Effect of pendant polarity on detergent conformation and membrane protein stability

Aiman Sadaf, Seonghoon Kim, Hyoung Eun Bae, Haoqing Wang, Andreas Nygaard, Yuki Uegaki, Yang Du, Chastine F. Munk, Satoshi Katsube, Hyun Sung Lee, Jungnam Bae, Chul Won Choi, Hee-Jung Choi, Bernadette Byrne, Samuel H. Gellman, Lan Guan, Claus J. Loland, Brian K. Kobilka, Wonpil Im, Pil Seok Chae*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

Membrane protein structures provide atomic level insight into essential biochemical processes and facilitate protein structure-based drug design. However, the inherent instability of these bio-macromolecules outside lipid bilayers hampers their structural and functional study. Detergent micelles can be used to solubilize and stabilize these membrane-inserted proteins in aqueous solution, thereby enabling their downstream characterizations. Membrane proteins encapsulated in detergent micelles tend to denature and aggregate over time, highlighting the need for development of new amphiphiles effective for protein solubility and stability. In this work, we present newly-designed maltoside detergents containing a pendant chain attached to a glycerol-decorated tris(hydroxymethyl)methane (THM) core, designated GTMs. One set of the GTMs has a hydrophobic pendant (ethyl chain; E-GTMs), and the other set has a hydrophilic pendant (methoxyethoxylmethyl chain; M-GTMs) placed in the hydrophobic-hydrophilic interfaces. The two sets of GTMs displayed profoundly different behaviors in terms of detergent self-assembly and protein stabilization efficacy. These behaviors mainly arise from the polarity difference between two pendants (ethyl and methoxyethoxylmethyl chains) that results in a large variation in detergent conformation between these sets of GTMs in aqueous media. The resulting high hydrophobic density in the detergent micelle interior is likely responsible for enhanced efficacy of the M-GTMs for protein stabilization compared to the E-GTMs and a gold standard detergent DDM. A representative GTM, M-GTM-O12, was more effective for protein stability than some recently developed detergents including LMNG. This is the first case study investigating the effect of pendant polarity on detergent geometry correlated with detergent efficacy for protein stabilization. Statement of significance This study introduces new amphiphiles for use as biochemical tools in membrane protein studies. We identified a few hydrophilic pendant-bearing amphiphiles such as M-GTM-O11 and M-GTM-O12 that & nbsp;show remarkable efficacy for membrane protein solubilization and stabilization compared to a gold stan-dard DDM, the hydrophobic counterparts (E-GTMs) and a significantly optimized detergent LMNG. In ad-dition, detergent results obtained in the current study reveals the effect of detergent pendant polarity on protein solubility and stability. Thus, the current study represents both significant chemical and con-ceptual advance. The detergent tools and design principle introduced here advance protein science and facilitate structure-based drug design and development. (c) 2021 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Original languageEnglish
JournalActa Biomaterialia
Volume128
Pages (from-to)393-407
Number of pages15
ISSN1742-7061
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Keywords

  • Pendant polarity
  • Detergent conformation
  • Membrane proteins
  • Protein stabilization
  • Amphiphile design
  • RESONANCE ENERGY-TRANSFER
  • ESCHERICHIA-COLI
  • MELIBIOSE PERMEASE
  • GNG AMPHIPHILES
  • RECEPTOR
  • BINDING
  • GUI
  • CRYSTALLIZATION
  • SOLUBILIZATION
  • STABILIZATION

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