Membrane protein structure determination using crystallography and lipidic mesophases: recent advances and successes.
Citation:
Caffrey M, Li D, Dukkipati A, Membrane protein structure determination using crystallography and lipidic mesophases: recent advances and successes., Biochemistry, 51, 32, 2012, 6266-88Download Item:

Abstract:
The crystal structure of the
β
2
-adrenergic receptor in complex with an agonist and its cognate G
protein has just recently been solved. It is now possible to explore in molecular detail the means
by which this paradigmatic transmembrane receptor binds agonist, communicates the impulse or
signalling event across the membrane and sets in motion a series of G protein-directed
intracellular responses. The structure was determined using crystals of the ternary complex grown
in a rationally designed lipidic mesophase by the so-called
in meso
method. The method is
proving to be particularly useful in the G protein-coupled receptor field where the structures of
thirteen distinct receptor types have been solved in the past five years. In addition to receptors, the
method has proven useful with a wide variety of integral membrane protein classes that include
bacterial and eukaryotic rhodopsins, a light harvesting complex II (LHII), photosynthetic reaction
centers, cytochrome oxidases,
β
-barrels, an exchanger, and an integral membrane peptide. This
attests to the versatility and range of the method and supports the view that the
in meso
method
should be included in the arsenal of the serious membrane structural biologist. For this to happen
however, the reluctance in adopting it attributable, in part, to the anticipated difficulties associated
with handling the sticky, viscous cubic mesophase in which crystals grow must be overcome.
Harvesting and collecting diffraction data with the mesophase-grown crystals is also viewed with
some trepidation. It is acknowledged that there are challenges associated with the method. Over
the years, we have endeavored to establish how the method works at a molecular level and to
make it user-friendly. To these ends, tools for handling the mesophase in the pico- to nano-liter
volume range have been developed for highly efficient crystallization screening in manual and
robotic modes. Methods have been implemented for evaluating the functional activity of
membrane proteins reconstituted into the bilayer of the cubic phase as a prelude to
crystallogenesis. Glass crystallization plates have been built that provide unparalleled optical
quality and sensitivity to nascent crystals. Lipid and precipitant screens have been designed for a
more rational approach to crystallogenesis such that the method can now be applied to an even
wider variety of membrane protein types. In this Current Topics article, these assorted advances
are outlined along with a summary of the membrane proteins that have yielded to the method. The
prospects for and the challenges that must be overcome to further develop the method are
described
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/mcaffreDescription:
PUBLISHED
Author: CAFFREY, MARTIN
Type of material:
Journal ArticleCollections:
Series/Report no:
Biochemistry51
32
Availability:
Full text availableKeywords:
complex, crystallization, enzyme, G protein-coupled receptor, G protein, high-throughput, in meso method, lipid metabolism, lipidic cubic phase, macromolecular X-ray crystallography, membrane protein structure, mesophase, robot, structure-function, transporterDOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi300010wLicences: