A formalism for membrane protein structure determination was developed. This method is based on steady-state FRET data and information about the position of the fluorescence maxima on site-directed fluorescent labeled proteins in combination with global data analysis utilizing simulation-based fitting. The methodology was applied to determine the structural properties of the N-terminal domain of the major coat protein from bacteriophage M13 reconstituted into unilamellar DOPC/DOPG (4:1 mol/mol) vesicles. For our purpose, the cysteine mutants A7C, A9C, N12C, S13C, Q15C, A16C, S17C, and A18C in the N-terminal domain of this protein were produced and specifically labeled with the fluorescence probe AEDANS. The energy transfer data from the natural Trp-26 to AEDANS were analyzed assuming a two-helix protein model. Furthermore, the polarity Stokes shift of the AEDANS fluorescence maxima is taken into account. As a result the orientation and tilt of the N-terminal protein domain with respect to the bilayer interface were obtained, showing for the first time, to our knowledge, an overall α-helical protein conformation from amino acid residues 12-46, close to the protein conformation in the intact phage. © 2007 by the Biophysical Society.
CITATION STYLE
Nazarov, P. V., Koehorst, R. B. M., Vos, W. L., Apanasovich, V. V., & Hemminga, M. A. (2007). FRET study of membrane proteins: Determination of the tilt and orientation of the N-terminal domain of M13 major coat protein. Biophysical Journal, 92(4), 1296–1305. https://doi.org/10.1529/biophysj.106.095026
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