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A Mass-Spectrometry-Based Approach to Distinguish Annular and Specific Lipid Binding to Membrane Proteins.


ABSTRACT: Membrane proteins engage in a variety of contacts with their surrounding lipids, but distinguishing between specifically bound lipids, and non-specific, annular interactions is a challenging problem. Applying native mass spectrometry to three membrane protein complexes with different lipid-binding properties, we explore the ability of detergents to compete with lipids bound in different environments. We show that lipids in annular positions on the presenilin homologue protease are subject to constant exchange with detergent. By contrast, detergent-resistant lipids bound at the dimer interface in the leucine transporter show decreased koff rates in molecular dynamics simulations. Turning to the lipid flippase MurJ, we find that addition of the natural substrate lipid-II results in the formation of a 1:1 protein-lipid complex, where the lipid cannot be displaced by detergent from the highly protected active site. In summary, we distinguish annular from non-annular lipids based on their exchange rates in solution.

SUBMITTER: Bolla JR 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7065234 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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A Mass-Spectrometry-Based Approach to Distinguish Annular and Specific Lipid Binding to Membrane Proteins.

Bolla Jani Reddy JR   Corey Robin A RA   Sahin Cagla C   Gault Joseph J   Hummer Alissa A   Hopper Jonathan T S JTS   Lane David P DP   Drew David D   Allison Timothy M TM   Stansfeld Phillip J PJ   Robinson Carol V CV   Landreh Michael M  

Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) 20200129 9


Membrane proteins engage in a variety of contacts with their surrounding lipids, but distinguishing between specifically bound lipids, and non-specific, annular interactions is a challenging problem. Applying native mass spectrometry to three membrane protein complexes with different lipid-binding properties, we explore the ability of detergents to compete with lipids bound in different environments. We show that lipids in annular positions on the presenilin homologue protease are subject to con  ...[more]

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