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Membrane Protein Structure Determination and Characterisation by Solution and Solid-State NMR.

Authors :
Yeh, Vivien
Goode, Alice
Bonev, Boyan B.
Source :
Biology (2079-7737). Nov2020, Vol. 9 Issue 11, p396. 1p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Simple Summary: Cells, life's smallest units, are defined within the enclosure of thin, continuous membranes, which confine the molecular machinery required for the life and replication of cells. Crucially, membranes of cells establish and actively maintain distinctly different environments inside cells, including electrical and solute gradients vital to normal cellular functions. Membrane proteins are in charge of transport, electrical polarisation, signalling, membrane remodelling and other important functions. As such, membrane proteins are key drug targets and understanding their structure and function is essential to drug development and cellular control. Membrane proteins have physical characteristics that make such studies very challenging. Nuclear magnetic resonance is one advanced tool that enables structural studies of membrane proteins and their interactions at the atomic level of detail. We discuss the applications of NMR in solution and solid state to membrane protein studies alongside new developments in signal and sensitivity enhancement through dynamic nuclear polarisation. Biological membranes define the interface of life and its basic unit, the cell. Membrane proteins play key roles in membrane functions, yet their structure and mechanisms remain poorly understood. Breakthroughs in crystallography and electron microscopy have invigorated structural analysis while failing to characterise key functional interactions with lipids, small molecules and membrane modulators, as well as their conformational polymorphism and dynamics. NMR is uniquely suited to resolving atomic environments within complex molecular assemblies and reporting on membrane organisation, protein structure, lipid and polysaccharide composition, conformational variations and molecular interactions. The main challenge in membrane protein studies at the atomic level remains the need for a membrane environment to support their fold. NMR studies in membrane mimetics and membranes of increasing complexity offer close to native environments for structural and molecular studies of membrane proteins. Solution NMR inherits high resolution from small molecule analysis, providing insights from detergent solubilised proteins and small molecular assemblies. Solid-state NMR achieves high resolution in membrane samples through fast sample spinning or sample alignment. Recent developments in dynamic nuclear polarisation NMR allow signal enhancement by orders of magnitude opening new opportunities for expanding the applications of NMR to studies of native membranes and whole cells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20797737
Volume :
9
Issue :
11
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Biology (2079-7737)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
147263757
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/biology9110396