Structure of outer membrane protein G in lipid bilayers

β-barrel proteins mediate nutrient uptake in bacteria and serve vital functions in cell signaling and adhesion. For the 14-strand outer membrane protein G of Escherichia coli , opening and closing is pH-dependent. Different roles of the extracellular loops in this process were proposed, and X-ray an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2017-12, Vol.8 (1), p.2073-10, Article 2073
Hauptverfasser: Retel, Joren S., Nieuwkoop, Andrew J., Hiller, Matthias, Higman, Victoria A., Barbet-Massin, Emeline, Stanek, Jan, Andreas, Loren B., Franks, W. Trent, van Rossum, Barth-Jan, Vinothkumar, Kutti R., Handel, Lieselotte, de Palma, Gregorio Giuseppe, Bardiaux, Benjamin, Pintacuda, Guido, Emsley, Lyndon, Kühlbrandt, Werner, Oschkinat, Hartmut
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:β-barrel proteins mediate nutrient uptake in bacteria and serve vital functions in cell signaling and adhesion. For the 14-strand outer membrane protein G of Escherichia coli , opening and closing is pH-dependent. Different roles of the extracellular loops in this process were proposed, and X-ray and solution NMR studies were divergent. Here, we report the structure of outer membrane protein G investigated in bilayers of E. coli lipid extracts by magic-angle-spinning NMR. In total, 1847 inter-residue 1 H– 1 H and 13 C– 13 C distance restraints, 256 torsion angles, but no hydrogen bond restraints are used to calculate the structure. The length of β-strands is found to vary beyond the membrane boundary, with strands 6–8 being the longest and the extracellular loops 3 and 4 well ordered. The site of barrel closure at strands 1 and 14 is more disordered than most remaining strands, with the flexibility decreasing toward loops 3 and 4. Loop 4 presents a well-defined helix. Porins, like OmpG, are embedded in the outer membrane of bacteria and facilitate uptake and secretion of nutrients and ions. Here the authors present a protocol for solid state NMR structure determination of proteins larger than 25 kDa and use it to structurally characterize membrane embedded OmpG.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-017-02228-2