Abstract

Little is known about the dynamic process of membrane protein folding, and few models exist to explore it. In this study we doubled the number of Escherichia coli outer membrane proteins (OMPs) for which folding into lipid bilayers has been systematically investigated. We cloned, expressed, and folded nine OMPs: outer membrane protein X (OmpX), OmpW, OmpA, the crcA gene product (PagP), OmpT, outer membrane phospholipase A (OmpLa), the fadl gene product (FadL), the yaet gene product (Omp85), and OmpF. These proteins fold into the same bilayer in vivo and share a transmembrane beta-barrel motif but vary in sequence and barrel size. We quantified the ability of these OMPs to fold into a matrix of bilayer environments. Several trends emerged from these experiments: higher pH values, thinner bilayers, and increased bilayer curvature promote folding of all OMPs. Increasing the incubation temperature promoted folding of several OMPs but inhibited folding of others. We discovered that OMPs do not have the same ability to fold into any single bilayer environment. This suggests that although environmental factors influence folding, OMPs also have intrinsic qualities that profoundly modulate their folding. To rationalize the differences in folding efficiency, we performed kinetic and thermal denaturation experiments, the results of which demonstrated that OMPs employ different strategies to achieve the observed folding efficiency.

Highlights

  • Thinner Bilayers and Smaller Vesicles Promote Folding Efficiency—To probe the bilayer properties that affect outer membrane proteins (OMPs) folding, we incubated OMPs overnight with synthetic vesicles composed of a variety of lipids

  • Previous OMP studies have used residual amounts of urea under folding conditions [11,12,13,14, 21], yet outer membrane protein A (OmpA) can fold in 4 M urea [25] and PagP can fold in 7 M urea [15]

  • OMPs can fold into synthetic vesicles at a variety of urea concentrations, we chose a low concentration of urea (1 M) in which to conduct this folding screen

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Summary

Introduction

A small population of only four of the nine proteins (OmpX, OmpA, OmpT, and Omp85) could fold into SUVs of native lipids. Proteins that exhibit high folding efficiency in the diC12PC bilayer (OmpX, OmpA, Omp85) are unaffected by the presence of the guest lipids.

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