Monolayers of a Model Anesthetic-Binding Membrane Protein. Formation, Characterization and Halothane-Binding Affinity
Inna Y Churbanova 1, Andrey Tronin 1, Joseph Strzalka 1*, Thomas Gog 2, Ivan Kuzmenko 2, Jonas S Johansson 3 and J. Kent Blasie 1
1 Department of Chemistry, University of Pennsylvania
2 Complex Materials Consortium, Advanced Photon Source, Argonne National Laboratory
3 Department of Anesthesiology, University of Pennsylvania
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: strzalka{at}sas.upenn.edu.
Submitted on August 11, 2005
Revised on September 28, 2005
Accepted on 19 January 2006
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Abstract |
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"hbAP0" is a model membrane protein designed to possess an anesthetic-binding cavity in its hydrophilic domain and a cation channel in its hydrophobic domain. Grazing incidence x-ray diffraction shows that hbAP0 forms 4-helix bundles that are vectorially oriented within Langmuir monolayers at the air-water interface. Single monolayers of hbAP0 on alkylated solid substrates would provide an optimal system for detailed structural and dynamical studies of anesthetic-peptide interaction via x-ray and neutron scattering and polarized spectroscopic techniques. Langmuir-Blodgett and Langmuir-Schaeffer deposition and self-assembly techniques were used to form single monolayer films of the vectorially-oriented peptide hbAP0 via both chemisorption and physisorption onto suitably alkylated solid substrates. The films were characterized by UV absorption, ellipsometry, circular dichroism, and polarized FTIR. The alpha-helical secondary structure of the peptide was retained in the films. Under certain conditions, the average orientation of the helical axis was inclined relative to the plane of the substrate, approaching perpendicular in some cases. The halothane-binding affinity of the vectorially-oriented hbAP0 peptide in the single monolayers, with the volatile anesthetic introduced into the moist vapor environment of the monolayer, was found to be similar to that for the detergent-solubilized peptide.
Key Words:
Langmuir-Blodgett films, Self assembled films, anesthesiology, ion channel, membrane protein, tryptophan fluorescence