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  4. Rapid Enrichment of a Native Multipass Transmembrane Protein via Cell Membrane Electrophoresis through Buffer pH and Ionic Strength Adjustment
 
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Rapid Enrichment of a Native Multipass Transmembrane Protein via Cell Membrane Electrophoresis through Buffer pH and Ionic Strength Adjustment

Journal
Journal of the American Chemical Society
Journal Volume
146
Journal Issue
17
Start Page
11634
End Page
11647
ISSN
0002-7863
1520-5126
Date Issued
2024-04-17
Author(s)
Tzu-Tzu Liu
Sin-Han Huang
Ling Chao  
DOI
10.1021/jacs.3c13579
DOI
10.1021/jacs.3c13579
URI
https://www.scopus.com/record/display.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85190744342&origin=resultslist
https://scholars.lib.ntu.edu.tw/handle/123456789/719481
Abstract
Supported membrane electrophoresis is a promising technique for collecting membrane proteins in native bilayer environments. However, the slow mobility of typical transmembrane proteins has impeded the technique’s advancement. Here, we successfully applied cell membrane electrophoresis to rapidly enrich a 12-transmembrane helix protein, glucose transporter 1 with antibodies (GLUT1 complex), by tuning the buffer pH and ionic strength. The identified conditions allowed the separation of the GLUT1 complex and a lipid probe, Fast-DiO, within a native-like environment in a few minutes. A force model was developed to account for distinct electric and drag forces acting on the transmembrane and aqueous-exposed portion of a transmembrane protein as well as the electroosmotic force. This model not only elucidates the impact of size and charge properties of transmembrane proteins but also highlights the influence of pH and ionic strength on the driving forces and, consequently, electrophoretic mobility. Model predictions align well with experimentally measured electrophoretic mobilities of the GLUT1 complex and Fast-DiO at various pH and ionic strengths as well as with several lipid probes, lipid-anchored proteins, and reconstituted membrane proteins from previous studies. Force analyses revealed the substantial membrane drag of the GLUT1 complex, significantly slowing down electrophoretic mobility. Besides, the counterbalance of similar magnitudes of electroosmotic and electric forces results in a small net driving force and, consequently, reduced mobility under typical neutral pH conditions. Our results further highlight how the size and charge properties of transmembrane proteins influence the suitable range of operating conditions for effective movement, providing potential applications for concentrating and isolating membrane proteins within this platform.
SDGs

[SDGs]SDG3

Publisher
American Chemical Society (ACS)
Type
journal article

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