Effects of Lipid-Analog Detergent Solubilization on the Functionality and Lipidic Cubic Phase Mobility of the Torpedo californica Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor
Author
Padilla-Morales, Luis F.
Morales-Pérez, Claudio L.
De La Cruz-Rivera, Pamela C.
Asmar-Rovira, Guillermo A.
Báez-Pagán, Carlos A.
Quesada, Orestes
Lasalde-Dominicci, José A.
Type
ArticleDate
2012Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Over the past three decades, the Torpedo californica nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) has
been one of the most extensively studied membrane protein systems. However, the effects of
detergent solubilization on nAChR stability and function are poorly understood. The use of lipidanalog
detergents for nAChR solubilization has been shown to preserve receptor stability and
functionality. The present study used lipid-analog detergents from phospholipid-analog and
cholesterol-analog detergent families for solubilization and affinity purification of the receptor and
probed nAChR ion channel function using planar lipid bilayers (PLBs) and stability using
analytical size exclusion chromatography (A-SEC) in the detergent-solubilized state. We also
examined receptor mobility on the lipidic cubic phase (LCP) by measuring the nAChR mobile
fraction and diffusion coefficient through fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP)
experiments using lipid-analog and non-lipid-analog detergents. Our results show that it is possible to isolate stable and functional nAChRs using lipid-analog detergents, with characteristic
ion channel currents in PLBs and minimal aggregation as observed in A-SEC. Furthermore,
fractional mobility and diffusion coefficient values observed in FRAP experiments were similar to
the values observed for these parameters in the recently LCP-crystallized β2-adrenergic receptor.
The overall results show that phospholipid-analog detergents with 16 carbon acyl-chains support
nAChR stability, functionality and LCP mobility.