Prediction of Charge-Induced Molecular Alignment of Biomolecules Dissolved in Dilute Liquid-Crystalline Phases

Markus Zweckstetter, Gerhard Hummer, Ad Bax
2004 Biophysical Journal  
Alignment of macromolecules in nearly neutral aqueous lyotropic liquid-crystalline media such as bicelles, commonly used in macromolecular NMR studies, can be predicted accurately by a steric obstruction model (Zweckstetter and Bax, 2000) . A simple extension of this model is described that results in improved predictions for both the alignment orientation and magnitude of protein and DNA solutes in charged nematic media, such as the widely used medium of filamentous phage Pf1. The extended
more » ... l approximates the electrostatic interaction between a solute and an ordered phage particle as that between the solute's surface charges and the electric field of the phage. The model is evaluated for four different proteins and a DNA oligomer. Results indicate that alignment in charged nematic media is a function not only of the solute's shape, but also of its electric multipole moments of net charge, dipole, and quadrupole. The relative importance of these terms varies greatly from one macromolecule to another, and evaluation of the experimental data indicates that these terms scale differently with ionic strength. For several of the proteins, the calculated alignment is sensitive to the precise position of the charged groups on the protein surface. This suggests that NMR alignment measurements can potentially be used to probe protein electrostatics. Inclusion of electrostatic interactions in addition to steric effects makes the extended model applicable to all liquid crystals used in biological NMR to date.
doi:10.1529/biophysj.103.035790 pmid:15189846 pmcid:PMC1304251 fatcat:olohxh54yjfw3bod7gfmmle2ta