Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.128, No.29, 9549-9554, 2006
Determining the topology of integral membrane peptides using EPR spectroscopy
This paper reports on the development of a new structural biology technique for determining the membrane topology of an integral membrane protein inserted into magnetically aligned phospholipid bilayers (bicelles) using EPR spectroscopy. The nitroxide spin probe, 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl-4-amino-4-carboxylic acid (TOAC), was attached to the pore-lining transmembrane domain (M2 delta) of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AChR) and incorporated into a bicelle. The corresponding EPR spectra revealed hyperfine splittings that were highly dependent on the macroscopic orientation of the bicelles with respect to the static magnetic field. The helical tilt of the peptide can be easily calculated using the hyperfine splittings gleaned from the orientational dependent EPR spectra. A helical tilt of 14 degrees was calculated for the M2 delta peptide with respect to the bilayer normal of the membrane, which agrees well with previous N-15 solid-state NMR studies. The helical tilt of the peptide was verified by simulating the corresponding EPR spectra using the standardized MOMD approach. This new method is advantageous because: (1) bicelle samples are easy to prepare, (2) the helical tilt can be directly calculated from the orientational-dependent hyperfine splitting in the EPR spectra, and (3) EPR spectroscopy is approximately 1000-fold more sensitive than N-15 solid-state NMR spectroscopy; thus, the helical tilt of an integral membrane peptide can be determined with only 100 mu g of peptide. The helical tilt can be determined more accurately by placing TOAC spin labels at several positions with this technique.