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X-ray diffraction reveals the intrinsic difference in the physical properties of membrane and soluble proteins.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Robert, Xavier 
Kassis-Sahyoun, Josiane 
Ceres, Nicoletta 
Sawaya, Michael R 

Abstract

Membrane proteins are distinguished from soluble proteins by their insertion into biological membranes. This insertion is achieved via a noticeable arrangement of hydrophobic amino acids that are exposed at the surface of the protein, and renders the interaction with the aliphatic tails of lipids more energetically favorable. This important difference between these two categories of proteins is the source of the need for a specific handling of membrane proteins, which transpired in the creation of new tools for their recombinant expression, purification and even crystallization. Following this line, we show here that crystals of membrane proteins display systematically higher diffraction anisotropy than those of soluble proteins. This phenomenon dramatically hampers structure solution and refinement, and has a strong impact on the quality of electron-density maps. A farther search for origins of this phenomenon showed that the type of crystallization, and thus the crystal packing, has no impact on anisotropy, nor does the nature or function of the membrane protein. Membrane proteins fully embedded within the membrane display equal anisotropy compared to the ones with extra membranous domains or fusions with soluble proteins. Overall, these results overturn common beliefs and call for a specific handling of their diffraction data.

Description

Keywords

Anisotropy, Cell Membrane, Crystallization, Detergents, Humans, Membrane Proteins, Protein Conformation, X-Ray Diffraction

Journal Title

Sci Rep

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2045-2322
2045-2322

Volume Title

7

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (082961/Z/07/A)