Probing the transmembrane structure and topology of microsomal cytochrome-P450 by solid-state NMR on temperature-resistant bicelles

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Abstract

Though the importance of high-resolution structure and dynamics of membrane proteins has been well recognized, optimizing sample conditions to retain the native-like folding and function of membrane proteins for Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) or X-ray measurements has been a major challenge. While bicelles have been shown to stabilize the function of membrane proteins and are increasingly utilized as model membranes, the loss of their magnetic-alignment at low temperatures makes them unsuitable to study heat-sensitive membrane proteins like cytochrome-P450 and protein-protein complexes. In this study, we report temperature resistant bicelles that can magnetically-align for a broad range of temperatures and demonstrate their advantages in the structural studies of full-length microsomal cytochrome-P450 and cytochrome-b5 by solid-state NMR spectroscopy. Our results reveal that the N-terminal region of rabbit cytochromeP4502B4, that is usually cleaved off to obtain crystal structures, is helical and has a transmembrane orientation with ∼17tilt from the lipid bilayer normal.

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Yamamoto, K., Gildenberg, M., Ahuja, S., Im, S. C., Pearcy, P., Waskell, L., & Ramamoorthy, A. (2013). Probing the transmembrane structure and topology of microsomal cytochrome-P450 by solid-state NMR on temperature-resistant bicelles. Scientific Reports, 3. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep02556

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