1. Facade-Based Bicelles as a New Tool for Production of Active Membrane Proteins in a Cell-Free System.
- Author
-
Goncharuk MV, Vasileva EV, Ananiev EA, Gorokhovatsky AY, Bocharov EV, Mineev KS, and Goncharuk SA
- Subjects
- Detergents chemistry, Cell-Free System, Micelles, Membrane Proteins chemistry, Lipid Bilayers chemistry
- Abstract
Integral membrane proteins are important components of a cell. Their structural and functional studies require production of milligram amounts of proteins, which nowadays is not a routine process. Cell-free protein synthesis is a prospective approach to resolve this task. However, there are few known membrane mimetics that can be used to synthesize active membrane proteins in high amounts. Here, we present the application of commercially available "Facade" detergents for the production of active rhodopsin. We show that the yield of active protein in lipid bicelles containing Facade-EM, Facade-TEM, and Facade-EPC is several times higher than in the case of conventional bicelles with CHAPS and DHPC and is comparable to the yield in the presence of lipid-protein nanodiscs. Moreover, the effects of the lipid-to-detergent ratio, concentration of detergent in the feeding mixture, and lipid composition of the bicelles on the total, soluble, and active protein yields are discussed. We show that Facade-based bicelles represent a prospective membrane mimetic, available for the production of membrane proteins in a cell-free system.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF