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Development of electron spin echo envelope modulation spectroscopy to probe the secondary structure of recombinant membrane proteins in a lipid bilayer
Authors:Rongfu Zhang  Indra D Sahu  Kaylee R Gibson  Nefertiti B Muhammad  Avnika P Bali  Raven G Comer  Lishan Liu  Andrew F Craig  Robert M Mccarrick  Carole Dabney‐Smith  Charles R Sanders  Gary A Lorigan
Institution:1. Cell, Molecular, and Structural Biology Graduate Program, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio;2. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio;3. Department of Biochemistry and Center for Structural Biology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee
Abstract:Membrane proteins conduct many important biological functions essential to the survival of organisms. However, due to their inherent hydrophobic nature, it is very difficult to obtain structural information on membrane‐bound proteins using traditional biophysical techniques. We are developing a new approach to probe the secondary structure of membrane proteins using the pulsed EPR technique of Electron Spin Echo Envelope Modulation (ESEEM) Spectroscopy. This method has been successfully applied to model peptides made synthetically. However, in order for this ESEEM technique to be widely applicable to larger membrane protein systems with no size limitations, protein samples with deuterated residues need to be prepared via protein expression methods. For the first time, this study shows that the ESEEM approach can be used to probe the local secondary structure of a 2H‐labeled d8‐Val overexpressed membrane protein in a membrane mimetic environment. The membrane‐bound human KCNE1 protein was used with a known solution NMR structure to demonstrate the applicability of this methodology. Three different α‐helical regions of KCNE1 were probed: the extracellular domain (Val21), transmembrane domain (Val50), and cytoplasmic domain (Val95). These results indicated α‐helical structures in all three segments, consistent with the micelle structure of KCNE1. Furthermore, KCNE1 was incorporated into a lipid bilayer and the secondary structure of the transmembrane domain (Val50) was shown to be α‐helical in a more native‐like environment. This study extends the application of this ESEEM approach to much larger membrane protein systems that are difficult to study with X‐ray crystallography and/or NMR spectroscopy.
Keywords:membrane protein  ESEEM  SDSL  α  ‐helix  EPR  KCNE1
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