Publication | Closed Access
Lipid−Protein Nanoscale Bilayers: A Versatile Medium for NMR Investigations of Membrane Proteins and Membrane-Active Peptides
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Citations
11
References
2008
Year
Membrane-active PeptidesMembrane StructureProteinlipid InteractionLipid PreparationBiochemistryNmr Time ScaleMembrane BiologyRhdl ParticlesMembrane ProteinsLipid MovementMedicineLipid−protein Nanoscale BilayersNanodiscBiophysicsHigh-resolution Nmr
In the present Communication we demonstrate the possibility to use high-resolution NMR for the investigation of membrane proteins in reconstituted high-density lipoprotein (rHDL) particles. The rHDL particles are nanoscale phospholipid bilayers wrapped around by a dimer of apolipoprotein A-1 (Bayburt, T. H.; Grinkova, Y. V.; Sligar, S. G. Nano Lett. 2002, 2, 853−856). In contrast to the commonly used spherical micelles, the rHDL particles incorporate a lipid bilayer like in biological membranes. These particles still undergo isotropic motion on the NMR time scale, providing the application of high-resolution NMR spectroscopy of the peptides and proteins embedded into their bilayer. As an example, the topology of the membrane-active peptide Antiamoebin-I in the bilayer of the rHDL particles was determined by using the lipid-soluble relaxation probe technique.
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