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  4. Incorporation of Rhodopsin in Laterally Structured Supported Membranes: Observation of Transducin Activation with Spatially and Time-Resolved Surface Plasmon Resonance
 
research article

Incorporation of Rhodopsin in Laterally Structured Supported Membranes: Observation of Transducin Activation with Spatially and Time-Resolved Surface Plasmon Resonance

Heyse, Stephan
•
Ernst, Oliver P.
•
Dienes, Zoltan
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1998
Biochemistry

Rhodopsin-transducin coupling was used as an assay to investigate a laterally patterned membrane reconstituted with a receptor and its G protein. It served as a model system to show the feasibility to immobilize G protein-coupled receptors on solid supports and investigate receptor activation and interaction with G proteins by one-dimensional imaging surface plasmon resonance. Supported membranes were formed by the self-assembly of lipids and rhodopsin from detergent soln. onto functionalized gold surfaces. They formed micrometer-sized alternating regions of pure fluid phospholipid bilayers sepd. by bilayers composed of an outer phospholipid leaflet on a gold-attached inner thiolipid. Rhodopsin was found to incorporate preferentially into the phospholipid bilayer regions, whereas transducin was uniformly distributed over the entire outer surface of the supported patterned membrane. The influence of rhodopsin on the dark binding of transducin to lipid membranes was described quant. and compared with previously published data. Coupling reactions with transducin resembled closely the native system, indicating that the native functionality of rhodopsin was preserved in the supported membranes. The spatially varying properties of the membranes resulted in a pattern of rhodopsin activity on the surface. This combination of techniques is very promising for the investigation of the lateral diffusion of transducin, can be extended to include signaling proteins downstream of the G protein, and may be applied to functional screening of other G protein-coupled receptors. In the future, it may also serve as a basis for constructing biosensors based on receptor proteins. [on SciFinder (R)]

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/bi971564r
Web of Science ID

WOS:000071549800008

Author(s)
Heyse, Stephan
Ernst, Oliver P.
Dienes, Zoltan
Hofmann, Klaus-Peter
Vogel, Horst  
Date Issued

1998

Published in
Biochemistry
Volume

37

Issue

2

Start page

507

End page

522

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LCPPM  
Available on Infoscience
February 27, 2006
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/226324
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