Abstract

Skeletonized zirconium phosphonate surfaces are used to support planar lipid bilayers and are shown to be viable substrates for studying transmembrane proteins. The skeletonized surfaces provide space between the bilayer and the solid support to enable protein insertion and avoid denaturation. The skeletonized zirconium octadecylphosphonate surfaces were prepared using Langmuir-Blodgett techniques by mixing octadecanol with octadecylphosphonic acid. After zirconation of the transferred monolayer, rinsing the coating with organic solvent removes the octadecanol, leaving holes in the film ranging from ∼50 to ∼500 nm in diameter, depending on the octadecanol content. Upon subsequent deposition of a lipid bilayer, either by vesicle fusion or by Langmuir-Blodgett/Langmuir-Schaefer techniques, the lipid assemblies span the holes providing reservoirs beneath the bilayer. The viability of the supported bilayers as model membranes for transmembrane proteins was demonstrated by examining two approaches for incorporating the proteins. The BK channel protein inserts directly into a preformed bilayer on the skeletonized surface, in contrast to a bilayer on a nonskeletonized film, for which the protein associates only weakly. As a second approach, the integrin α(5)β(1) was reconstituted in lipid vesicles, and its inclusion in supported bilayers on the skeletonized surface was achieved by vesicle fusion. The integrin retains its ability to recognize the extracellular matrix protein fibronectin when supported on the skeletonized film, again in contrast to the response if the bilayer is supported on a nonskeletonized film.

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