1. Academic Validation
  2. Fluorinated and hemifluorinated surfactants as alternatives to detergents for membrane protein cell-free synthesis

Fluorinated and hemifluorinated surfactants as alternatives to detergents for membrane protein cell-free synthesis

  • Biochem J. 2007 Apr 1;403(1):183-7. doi: 10.1042/BJ20061473.
Kyu-Ho Park 1 Catherine Berrier Florence Lebaupain Bernard Pucci Jean-Luc Popot Alexandre Ghazi Francesca Zito
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Laboratoire de Physico-chimie Moléculaire des Membranes Biologiques, UMR 7099, CNRS and Université Paris-7, Institut de Biologie Physico-Chimique, CNRS FRC 550, F-75005 Paris, France.
Abstract

Hemifluorinated and fluorinated Surfactants are lipophobic and, as such, non-detergent. Although they do not solubilize biological membranes, they can, after conventional solubilization, substitute for detergents to keep membrane proteins soluble, which generally improves their stability [Breyton, Chabaud, Chaudier, Pucci and Popot (2004) FEBS Lett. 564, 312-318]. In the present study, we show that (hemi)fluorinated Surfactants can be used for in vitro synthesis of membrane proteins: they do not interfere with protein synthesis, and they provide a suitable environment for MscL, a pentameric mechanosensitive channel, to fold and oligomerize to its native functional state. Following synthesis, both types of Surfactants can be used to deliver MscL directly to pre-formed lipid vesicles. The electrophysiological activity of MscL synthesized in vitro in the presence of either hemi- or per-fluorinated surfactant is similar to that of the protein expressed in vivo.

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