RESUMO
The high complexity of biological membranes has driven the development and application of a wide range of model membrane systems. Among these models, liposomes are extensively used because of their versatility in mimicking cellular membranes with a wide range of lipid compositions. However, the accurate quantification of lipid components, such as sterols, within these models remains a critical requirement for validation, data interpretation, and comparison. Here, we present a reliable and sensitive colorimetric assay using the Zak color reaction, which we have specifically adapted for the quantification of sterols at the micro-scale level. The assay was evaluated using cholesterol, ergosterol, and sitosterol standards, reflecting the diversity of sterol species across organisms. The reaction mechanism involves the dehydration of sterols to form carbonium ions, which are oxidized to form various enylic carbonium ions with specific absorption peaks. Due to the different chemical structures of cholesterol, ergosterol, and sitosterol, the resulting spectra show that the colored reaction products are formed in different proportions. The stability and interconversion of these species over time were analyzed. Cholesterol and sitosterol showed a clear peak at 555 nm, while ergosterol had prominent peaks at shorter wavelengths. Sterol assays on liposomal preparations showed accurate sterol incorporation with minimal loss during processing steps. These results demonstrate that this assay provides a robust and accurate measurement of sterol content in large unilamellar vesicles, making it a valuable tool for liposomal studies.
RESUMO
Reconstitution of membrane proteins into liposomal membranes represents a key technique in enabling functional analysis under well-defined conditions. In this review, we provide a brief introduction to selected methods that have been developed to determine membrane protein orientation after reconstitution in liposomes, including approaches based on proteolytic digestion with proteases, site-specific labeling, fluorescence quenching and activity assays. In addition, we briefly highlight new strategies based on single vesicle analysis to address the problem of sample heterogeneity.
Assuntos
Lipossomos , Proteínas de MembranaRESUMO
Reconstitution of membrane proteins into large unilamellar vesicles is an essential approach for their functional analysis under chemically defined conditions. The orientation of the protein in the liposomal membrane after reconstitution depends on many parameters, and its assessment is important prior to functional measurements. Common approaches for determining the orientation of a membrane-inserted protein are based on limited proteolytic digest, impermeable labeling reagents for specific amino acids, or membrane-impermeable quenchers for fluorescent proteins. Here, we describe a simple site-specific fluorescent assay based on self-labeling enzyme tags to determine the orientation of membrane proteins after reconstitution, exemplified on a reconstituted SNAP-tag plant H + -ATPase. This versatile method should benefit the optimization of reconstitution conditions and the analysis of many types of membrane proteins. Graphical abstract.
RESUMO
Reconstitution of membrane proteins into model membranes is an essential approach for their functional analysis under chemically defined conditions. Established model-membrane systems used in ensemble average measurements are limited by sample heterogeneity and insufficient knowledge of lipid and protein content at the single vesicle level, which limits quantitative analysis of vesicle properties and prevents their correlation with protein activity. Here, we describe a versatile total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy-based bleaching protocol that permits parallel analysis of multiple parameters (physical size, tightness, unilamellarity, membrane protein content, and orientation) of individual proteoliposomes prepared with fluorescently tagged membrane proteins and lipid markers. The approach makes use of commercially available fluorophores including the commonly used nitrobenzoxadiazole dye and may be applied to deduce functional molecular characteristics of many types of reconstituted fluorescently tagged membrane proteins.