In theory yes, you can fuse the termini to restrain the protein. You could use 
T4 lysozyme and insert in the loop which they use for crystallizing GPCRs (many 
references, including https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25450769). The 
potential problems are that you have no idea where the termini are 
distance-wise to each other in your receptor. Maybe trying some modelling with 
Phyre or Rosetta) You would probably have to make several constructs with 
varying lengths of flexible linkers and then there is no guarantee the fusion 
protein will actually express or crystallize.

You say you have had no luck crystallize the construct you have at the moment. 
Is it His-tagged? Can you remove it? If C-terminal you could use 
Carboxypeptidase A (1:100 w/w ratio) or limited proteolysis in general? You 
said it is a receptor. Have you tried with the ligand/binding protein? Lysine 
methylation? Thermal Shift Assay to identify a storage buffer which increases 
the Tm of the protein?

You could make new constructs with trimmed termini. Surface entropy reduction 
of the protein (use the SER server, http://services.mbi.ucla.edu/SER/). You 
could try fusing it to MBP or surface entropy reduced MBP 
(https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20196072).

Hope something helps and it crystallizes.

Dan

Daniel A Bonsor PhD.
Sundberg Lab
Institute of Human Virology
University of Maryland, Baltimore
725 W Lombard Street N370
Baltimore
Maryland
MD 21201
Tel: (410) 706-7457


From: CCP4 bulletin board [mailto:CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK] On Behalf Of Andrew 
Lovering
Sent: Wednesday, March 06, 2019 9:28 AM
To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Subject: [ccp4bb] off topic: Membrane protein "into" soluble protein

Dear ccp4bb members,

A quick off topic question. I have a protein whose domain structure runs 
N-TM-receptor-TM-enzyme-C, i.e. is a two transmembrane-helix containing 
signalling protein. One would suspect that the receptor domain has ends that 
cluster, and that the enzyme (via homology with known systems) is activated 
when the two helices self-interact in a dimeric protein as a four helix bundle.

So...my question - I have tried expressing the receptor domain as a soluble 
protein, it works well, folds, purifies, but doesn't crystallize. Does anyone 
know of an example of taking an exposed membrane protein loop/domain and making 
a chimera with a soluble 4 helix bundle such that the ends of the loop are 
tethered and restrained nicely?

I was thinking that this must've been attempted for transmembrane alpha-helical 
signalling proteins, perhaps even "PDB output" successfully!

Best
Andy

________________________________

To unsubscribe from the CCP4BB list, click the following link:
https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?SUBED1=CCP4BB&A=1

########################################################################

To unsubscribe from the CCP4BB list, click the following link:
https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?SUBED1=CCP4BB&A=1

Reply via email to