AI Article Synopsis

  • Native cell-membrane-derived supported lipid bilayers (SLBs) allow for the study of membrane proteins' dynamics and functions while minimizing substrate interaction through polymer cushions.
  • A study examined how varying lengths of PEG polymer impacted the mobility of different membrane proteins fused with GFP, revealing that longer polymers generally increased protein mobility.
  • Results indicated that all proteins reached similar diffusion coefficients at the longest polymer length, suggesting effective suspension of the SLBs above the substrate, though transient confinements were also noted for the proteins.

Article Abstract

Native cell-membrane-derived supported lipid bilayers (SLBs) are an emerging platform with broad applications ranging from fundamental research to next-generation biosensors. Central to the success of the platform is the proper accommodation of membrane proteins so that their dynamics and functions are preserved. Polymer cushions have been commonly employed to avoid direct contact between the bilayer membrane and the supporting substrate, and thus, the mobility of the transmembrane proteins is maintained. However, little is known about how the polymer cushion affects the absolute mobility of membrane molecules. Here, we characterized the dynamics of single membrane proteins in polymer-cushioned lipid bilayers derived from cell plasma membranes and investigated the effects of polymer length. Three membrane proteins with distinct structures, i.e., a GPI-anchored protein, single-pass transmembrane protein CD98 heavy chain, and seven-pass transmembrane protein SSTR3, were fused with green fluorescent protein (GFP), and their dynamics were measured by fluorescent single-molecule tracking. An automated data acquisition was implemented to study the effects of PEG polymer length on protein dynamics with large statistics. Our data showed that increasing the PEG polymer length (molecular weight from 1000 to 5000) enhanced the mobile fraction of the membrane proteins. Moreover, the diffusion coefficients of transmembrane proteins were augmented with the polymer length, whereas the diffusion coefficient of the GPI-anchored protein remained almost identical for different polymer lengths. Importantly, the diffusion coefficients of the three membrane proteins became identical (2.5 μm/s approximately) for the cushioned membrane with the longest polymer length (molecular weight of 5000), indicating that at the microscopic length scale, the SLBs were fully suspended from the substrate by the polymer cushion. Transient confinements were observed for all three proteins, and increasing the polymer length reduced the tendency of transient confinement. The measured dynamics of membrane proteins were found to be nearly unchanged after the depletion of cholesterol, suggesting that the observed immobilization and transient confinement were not due to cholesterol-enriched membrane nanodomains (lipid rafts). Our single-molecule dynamics elucidate the biophysical properties of polymer-cushioned plasma membrane bilayers that are potentially useful for the future developments of membrane-based biosensors and analytical assays.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.9b03789DOI Listing

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