Abstract

Amphipols (APols) are short amphipathic polymers that keep integral membrane proteins water-soluble while stabilizing them as compared to detergent solutions. In the present work, we have carried out functional and structural studies of a membrane transporter that had not been characterized in APol-trapped form yet, namely EII(mtl), a dimeric mannitol permease from the inner membrane of Escherichia coli. A tryptophan-less and dozens of single-tryptophan (Trp) mutants of this transporter are available, making it possible to study the environment of specific locations in the protein. With few exceptions, the single-Trp mutants show a high mannitol-phosphorylation activity when in membranes, but, as variance with wild-type EII(mtl), some of them lose most of their activity upon solubilization by neutral (PEG- or maltoside-based) detergents. Here, we present a protocol to isolate these detergent-sensitive mutants in active form using APol A8-35. Trapping with A8-35 keeps EII(mtl) soluble and functional in the absence of detergent. The specific phosphorylation activity of an APol-trapped Trp-less EII(mtl) mutant was found to be ~3× higher than the activity of the same protein in dodecylmaltoside. The preparations are suitable both for functional and for fluorescence spectroscopy studies. A fluorescein-labeled version of A8-35 has been synthesized and characterized. Exploratory studies were conducted to examine the environment of specific Trp locations in the transmembrane domain of EII(mtl) using Trp fluorescence quenching by water-soluble quenchers and by the fluorescein-labeled APol. This approach has the potential to provide information on the transmembrane topology of MPs.

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