“Invisible” detergents enable a reliable determination of solution structures of native photosystems by small-angle neutron scattering

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Date
2022-04-06
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Publisher
ACS Publications
Abstract
Photosystems I (PSI) and II (PSII) are pigment–protein complexes capable of performing the light-induced charge separation necessary to convert solar energy into a biochemically storable form, an essential step in photosynthesis. Small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) is unique in providing structural information on PSI and PSII in solution under nearly physiological conditions without the need for crystallization or temperature decrease. We show that the reliability of the solution structure critically depends on proper contrast matching of the detergent belt surrounding the protein. Especially, specifically deuterated (“invisible”) detergents are shown to be properly matched out in SANS experiments by a direct, quantitative comparison with conventional matching strategies. In contrast, protonated detergents necessarily exhibit incomplete matching so that related SANS results systematically overestimate the size of the membrane protein under study. While the solution structures obtained are close to corresponding high-resolution structures, we show that temperature and solution state lead to individual structural differences compared with high-resolution structures. We attribute these differences to the presence of a manifold of conformational substates accessible by protein dynamics under physiological conditions. © 2022 American Chemical Society
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Keywords
Detergents, Solutions, Small angle scattering, Energy storage, Proteins, Solar energy
Citation
Golub, M., Gätcke, J., Subramanian, S., Kölsch, A., Darwish, T., Howard, J. K., Feoktystov, A., Matsarskaia, O., Martel, A., Porcar, L., Zouni, A., & Pieper, J. (2022). “Invisible” detergents enable a reliable determination of solution structures of native photosystems by small-angle neutron scattering. The Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 126(15), 2824-2833. doi:10.1021/acs.jpcb.2c01591
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