Asymmetric maltose neopentyl glycol amphiphiles for a membrane protein study: Effect of detergent asymmetricity on protein stability

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Abstract

Maintaining protein stability in an aqueous solution is a prerequisite for protein structural and functional studies, but conventional detergents have increasingly showed limited ability to maintain protein integrity. A representative novel agent, maltose neopentyl glycol-3 (MNG-3), has recently substantially contributed to membrane protein structural studies. Motivated by the popular use of this novel agent, we prepared asymmetric versions of MNG-3 and evaluated these agents with several membrane proteins including two G protein-coupled receptors in this study. We found that some new MNGs were significantly more effective than MNG-3 at preserving protein integrity in the long term, suggesting that these asymmetric MNGs will find a wide use in membrane protein studies. In addition, this is the first study addressing the favorable effect of detergent asymmetric nature on membrane protein stability.

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Bae, H. E., Du, Y., Hariharan, P., Mortensen, J. S., Kumar, K. K., Ha, B., … Chae, P. S. (2019). Asymmetric maltose neopentyl glycol amphiphiles for a membrane protein study: Effect of detergent asymmetricity on protein stability. Chemical Science, 10(4), 1107–1116. https://doi.org/10.1039/c8sc02560f

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