Abstract

Membrane proteins are essential in the exchange processes of cells. In spite of great breakthrough in soluble proteins studies, membrane proteins structures, functions and interactions are still a challenge because of the difficulties related to their hydrophobic properties. Most of the experiments are performed with detergent-solubilized membrane proteins. However widely used micellar systems are far from the biological two-dimensions membrane. The development of new biomimetic membrane systems is fundamental to tackle this issue.We present an original approach that combines the Fluorescence Recovery After fringe Pattern Photobleaching technique and the use of a versatile sponge phase that makes it possible to extract crucial informations about interactions between membrane proteins embedded in the bilayers of a sponge phase. The clear advantage lies in the ability to adjust at will the spacing between two adjacent bilayers. When the membranes are far apart, the only possible interactions occur laterally between proteins embedded within the same bilayer, whereas when membranes get closer to each other, interactions between proteins embedded in facing membranes may occur as well.After validating our approach on the streptavidin-biotinylated peptide complex, we study the interactions between two membrane proteins, MexA and OprM, from a Pseudomonas aeruginosa efflux pump. The mode of interaction, the size of the protein complex and its potential stoichiometry are determined. In particular, we demonstrate that: MexA is effectively embedded in the bilayer; MexA and OprM do not interact laterally but can form a complex if they are embedded in opposite bilayers; the population of bound proteins is at its maximum for bilayers separated by a distance of about 200 Å, which is the periplasmic thickness of Pseudomonas aeruginosa. We also show that the MexA-OprM association is enhanced when the position and orientation of the protein is restricted by the bilayers. We extract a stoichiometry for the complex that exhibits a strong pH dependance: from 2 to 6 MexA per OprM trimer when the pH decreases from 7.5 to 5.5.Our technique allows to study membrane protein associations in a membrane environment. It provides some challenging information about complexes such as geometry and stoichiometry.

Highlights

  • Protein association is involved in a large array of biological processes: ligand-receptor interactions associated with cellular response to its environment, trafficking through export and fusion proteins, and antibiotic resistance mechanisms induced by efflux pumps [1,2,3,4]

  • We develop an original approach to characterize the association between membrane or transmembrane proteins embedded within the same membrane or located in different membranes

  • The clear advantage lies in the ability to adjust at will the spacing between two adjacent bilayers

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Summary

Introduction

Protein association is involved in a large array of biological processes: ligand-receptor interactions associated with cellular response to its environment, trafficking through export and fusion proteins, and antibiotic resistance mechanisms induced by efflux pumps [1,2,3,4]. There is a plethora of techniques allowing the study of protein association such as Quartz Crystal Microbalance [5], Surface Plasmon Resonance [6], Blue Native Page [7,8], ultracentrifugation [9,10,11] and structural biology. None of these techniques can probe the interactions between membrane or transmembrane proteins as well as their organization in complex assemblies. It is difficult to access the geometry of freely moving membranes on transmembrane protein association

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