RESUMO
TSPO is a ubiquitous transmembrane protein used as a pharmacological marker in neuroimaging. The only known atomic structure of mammalian TSPOs comes from the solution NMR of mouse TSPO (mTSPO) bound to the PK11195 ligand and in a DPC surfactant environment. No structure is available in a biomimetic environment and without PK11195 which strongly stiffens the protein. We measured the effect of different amphiphilic environments on ligand-free mTSPO to study its structure/function and find optimal solubilization conditions. By replacing the SDS surfactant, where the recombinant protein is purified, with mixed lipid:surfactant (DMPC:DPC) micelles at different ratios (0:1, 1:2, and 2:1, w:w), the α-helix content and interactions and the intrinsic tryptophan (Trp) fluorescence of mTSPO are gradually increased. Small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) shows a more extended mTSPO/belt complex with the addition of lipids: Dmax â¼95 Å in DPC alone versus â¼142 Å in DMPC:DPC (1:2). SEC-MALLS shows that the molecular composition of the mTSPO belt is â¼98 molecules for DPC alone and â¼58 DMPC and â¼175 DPC for DMPC:DPC (1:2). Additionally, DMPC:DPC micelles stabilize mTSPO compared to DPC alone, where the protein has a greater propensity to aggregate. These structural changes are consistent with the increased affinity of mTSPO for the PK11195 ligand in presence of lipids (Kd â¼70 µM in DPC alone versus â¼0.91 µM in DMPC:DPC, 1:2), as measured by microscale thermophoresis (MST). In conclusion, mixed lipid:surfactant micelles open new possibilities for the stabilization of membrane proteins and for their study in solution in a more biomimetic amphiphilic environment.
Assuntos
Micelas , Receptores de GABA , Tensoativos , Animais , Tensoativos/química , Camundongos , Receptores de GABA/química , Receptores de GABA/metabolismo , Lipídeos/química , Dimiristoilfosfatidilcolina/química , Relação Estrutura-AtividadeRESUMO
The translocator protein (TSPO) is a ubiquitous transmembrane protein of great pharmacological interest thanks to its high affinity to many drug ligands. The only high-resolution 3D-structure known for mammalian TSPO was obtained by NMR for the mouse mTSPO in DPC detergent only in presence of the high-affinity PK 11195 ligand. An atomic structure of free-ligand mTSPO is still missing to better understand the interaction of ligands with mTSPO and their effects on the protein conformation. Here, we decipher the solution structures of the recombinant mTSPO without ligand both in (i) SDS, the detergent used to extract and purify the protein from E. coli inclusion bodies, and (ii) DPC, the detergent used to solve the PK 11195-binding mTSPO NMR structure. We report partially refolded and less flexible mTSPO helices in DPC compared to SDS. Besides, DPC stabilizes the tertiary structure of mTSPO, as shown by a higher intrinsic Trp fluorescence and changes in indole environment. We evaluate by SEC-MALLS that â¼135 SDS and â¼100 DPC molecules are bound to mTSPO. SEC-small-angle X-ray (SAXS) and neutron (SANS) scattering confirm a larger mTSPO-detergent complex in SDS than in DPC. Using the contrast-matching technique in SEC-SANS, we demonstrate that mTSPO conformation is more compact and less flexible in DPC than in SDS. Combining ab initio modeling with SANS, we confirm that mTSPO conformation is less elongated in DPC than in SDS. However, the free-ligand mTSPO envelope in DPC is not as compact as the PK 11195-binding protein NMR structure, the ligand stiffening the protein.