Login / Signup

Quantifying the Initial Unfolding of Bacteriorhodopsin Reveals Retinal Stabilization.

Hao YuPatrick R HeenanDevin T EdwardsLyle UyetakeThomas T Perkins
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2019)
The forces that stabilize membrane proteins remain elusive to precise quantification. Particularly important, but poorly resolved, are the forces present during the initial unfolding of a membrane protein, where the most native set of interactions is present. A high-precision, atomic force microscopy assay was developed to study the initial unfolding of bacteriorhodopsin. A rapid near-equilibrium folding between the first three unfolding states was discovered, the two transitions corresponded to the unfolding of five and three amino acids, respectively, when using a cantilever optimized for 2 μs resolution. The third of these states was retinal-stabilized and previously undetected, despite being the most mechanically stable state in the whole unfolding pathway, supporting 150 pN for more than 1 min. This ability to measure the dynamics of the initial unfolding of bacteriorhodopsin provides a platform for quantifying the energetics of membrane proteins under native-like conditions.
Keyphrases
  • atomic force microscopy
  • single molecule
  • optical coherence tomography
  • high throughput
  • amino acid
  • high speed
  • high resolution