TY - JOUR
T1 - Home is where the lipids are
T2 - A comparison of MSP and DDDG nanodiscs for membrane protein research
AU - Nakao, Kaori
AU - Steinhauser, Alexandra
AU - Durand, Grégory
AU - Soulié, Marine
AU - Rechberger, Gerald N
AU - Züllig, Thomas
AU - Keller, Sandro
AU - Tych, Katarzyna
PY - 2025/7/15
Y1 - 2025/7/15
N2 - Nanodiscs have emerged as a powerful tool for studying membrane proteins in a lipid bilayer, with the standard approach relying on MSP-based nanodiscs that use detergent-mediated lipid exchange and encapsulation by MSP rings. However, this method may introduce artefacts from MSP interactions with the target protein and the nanodiscs constrained size. Here, we compare MSP-based nanodiscs with an alternative system using the amphiphile dodecyl-diglucoside (DDDG), which directly extracts membrane proteins along with their surrounding lipids from the cell membrane. Using a glutamate transporter homolog (GltTk) from
Thermococcus kodakarensis as a model, we assessed the efficiency of extraction and purification, thermal stability, and substrate binding capacity of GltTk in each of the two nanodisc systems. Our findings demonstrate that DDDG-based nanodiscs are comparable to MSP-based nanodiscs but may provide greater conformational flexibility and avoid possible artefacts due to MSP-GltTk interactions. Consequently, they provide a competent alternative to MSP-based nanodiscs through direct extraction, thereby preserving the proteins native lipid environment. Both approaches support structural and functional studies, but their suitability depends on the specific application. MSP-based nanodiscs remain advantageous for studies requiring well-defined lipid compositions, while DDDG nanodiscs offer distinct advantages for investigating proteins where native lipids and conformational freedom are critical.
AB - Nanodiscs have emerged as a powerful tool for studying membrane proteins in a lipid bilayer, with the standard approach relying on MSP-based nanodiscs that use detergent-mediated lipid exchange and encapsulation by MSP rings. However, this method may introduce artefacts from MSP interactions with the target protein and the nanodiscs constrained size. Here, we compare MSP-based nanodiscs with an alternative system using the amphiphile dodecyl-diglucoside (DDDG), which directly extracts membrane proteins along with their surrounding lipids from the cell membrane. Using a glutamate transporter homolog (GltTk) from
Thermococcus kodakarensis as a model, we assessed the efficiency of extraction and purification, thermal stability, and substrate binding capacity of GltTk in each of the two nanodisc systems. Our findings demonstrate that DDDG-based nanodiscs are comparable to MSP-based nanodiscs but may provide greater conformational flexibility and avoid possible artefacts due to MSP-GltTk interactions. Consequently, they provide a competent alternative to MSP-based nanodiscs through direct extraction, thereby preserving the proteins native lipid environment. Both approaches support structural and functional studies, but their suitability depends on the specific application. MSP-based nanodiscs remain advantageous for studies requiring well-defined lipid compositions, while DDDG nanodiscs offer distinct advantages for investigating proteins where native lipids and conformational freedom are critical.
KW - Nanostructures/chemistry
KW - Thermococcus/chemistry
KW - Lipid Bilayers/chemistry
KW - Membrane Proteins/chemistry
KW - Glucosides/chemistry
U2 - 10.1039/d5sm00327j
DO - 10.1039/d5sm00327j
M3 - Article
C2 - 40762966
SN - 1744-683X
VL - 21
SP - 6596
EP - 6602
JO - Soft Matter
JF - Soft Matter
IS - 33
ER -