Cholesteryl Hemisuccinate Is Not a Good Replacement
for Cholesterol in Lipid Nanodiscs
Posted on 2019-11-12 - 01:09
Nanodiscs
are suitable tools for studies of membrane proteins (MPs)
due to their ability to mimic native biological membranes, and several
MP structures are solved in nanodiscs. Among the various cell membrane
components, cholesterol (CHL) is known to regulate protein function
and its concentration can reach up to 50 mol %. However, studies comprising
cholesterol are challenging due to its hydrophobic nature, hence,
nanodiscs with only a low cholesterol concentration have been studied.
To overcome the problem, cholesterol analogs with high solubility
in polar solutions are often used, and one of them is cholesteryl
hemisuccinate (CHS). Nevertheless, in molecular dynamics (MD) simulation,
this is not an obstacle. In this study, we performed MD simulations
of nanodiscs containing neutral phosphatidylcholine (POPC) lipids,
negatively charged phosphatidylglycerol (POPG) lipids, CHL, or negatively
charged cholesterol analog, CHS. Our simulations show that CHS increases
the order of lipids in nanodiscs; the effect is, however, weaker than
CHL and even smaller in nanodiscs. Furthermore, CHS gathered around
scaffold proteins while cholesterol was uniformly distributed in the
nanodiscs. Thus, nanodiscs with CHS are heterogeneous and not equivalent
to nanodiscs with CHL. Finally, we also observed the increased concentration
of POPG near the scaffold proteins, driven by electrostatic interactions.
The MD results are experimentally validated using electron paramagnetic
resonance spectroscopy. These results show that nanodiscs are, in
fact, complex structures not easily comparable with planar lipid bilayers.
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Augustyn, Bozena; Stepien, Piotr; Poojari, Chetan; Mobarak, Edouard; Polit, Agnieszka; Wisniewska-Becker, Anna; et al. (2019). Cholesteryl Hemisuccinate Is Not a Good Replacement
for Cholesterol in Lipid Nanodiscs. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcb.9b07853