Abstract

Although polymer-based lipid nanodiscs are increasingly used in the structural studies of membrane proteins, the charge of the belt-forming polymer is a major limitation for functional reconstitution of membrane proteins possessing an opposite net charge to that of the polymer. This limitation also rules out the reconstitution of a protein-protein complex composed of oppositely charged membrane proteins. In this study, we report the first successful functional reconstitution of a membrane-bound redox complex constituting a cationic cytochrome P450 (CYP450) and an anionic cytochrome P450 reductase (CPR) in non-ionic inulin-based lipid nanodiscs. The gel-to-liquid-crystalline phase-transition temperature (Tm) of DMPC:DMPG (7:3 w/w) lipids in polymer nanodiscs was determined by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and 31P NMR experiments. The CYP450-CPR redox complex reconstitution in polymer nanodiscs was characterized by size-exclusion chromatography (SEC), and the electron transfer kinetics was carried out using the stopped-flow technique under anaerobic conditions. The Tm of DMPC:DMPG (7:3 w/w) in polymer nanodiscs measured from 31P NMR agrees with that obtained from DSC and was found to be higher than that for liposomes due to the decreased cooperativity of lipids present in the nanodiscs. The stopped-flow measurements revealed the CYP450-CPR redox complex reconstituted in nanodiscs to be functional, and the electron transfer kinetics was found to be temperature-dependent. Based on the successful demonstration of the use of non-ionic inulin-based polymer nanodiscs reported in this study, we expect them to be useful in studying the function and structures of a variety of membrane proteins/complexes irrespective of the charge of the molecular components. Since the polymer nanodiscs were shown to align in an externally applied magnetic field, they can also be used to measure residual dipolar couplings (RDCs) and residual quadrupolar couplings (RQCs) for various molecules ranging from small molecules to soluble proteins and nucleic acids.

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