Donggyun Kim, Weijing Liu, Rosa Viner, Vadim Cherezov
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Native mass spectrometry prescreening of G protein-coupled receptor complexes for cryo-EM structure determination
G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are essential transmembrane proteins playing key roles in human health and disease. Understanding their atomic-level molecular structure and conformational states is imperative for advancing drug development. Recent breakthroughs in single-particle cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM) have propelled the structural biology of GPCRs into a new era. Nevertheless, the preparation of suitable GPCR samples and their complexes for cryo-EM analysis remains challenging due to their poor stability and highly dynamic nature. Here, we present our online buffer exchange-native MS method combined with Direct Mass Technology (OBE-nMS+DMT) which facilitates high-throughput analysis and guides sample preparation. We applied this method to optimize the GPR119-Gs complex sample prior to cryo-EM analysis, leading to a 3.51 Å resolution structure from only 396 movies collected on a 200 kV Glacios. This study suggests that the OBE-nMS+DMT method emerges as a powerful tool for prescreening sample conditions in cryo-EM studies of GPCRs and other membrane protein complexes.
期刊介绍:
Structure aims to publish papers of exceptional interest in the field of structural biology. The journal strives to be essential reading for structural biologists, as well as biologists and biochemists that are interested in macromolecular structure and function. Structure strongly encourages the submission of manuscripts that present structural and molecular insights into biological function and mechanism. Other reports that address fundamental questions in structural biology, such as structure-based examinations of protein evolution, folding, and/or design, will also be considered. We will consider the application of any method, experimental or computational, at high or low resolution, to conduct structural investigations, as long as the method is appropriate for the biological, functional, and mechanistic question(s) being addressed. Likewise, reports describing single-molecule analysis of biological mechanisms are welcome.
In general, the editors encourage submission of experimental structural studies that are enriched by an analysis of structure-activity relationships and will not consider studies that solely report structural information unless the structure or analysis is of exceptional and broad interest. Studies reporting only homology models, de novo models, or molecular dynamics simulations are also discouraged unless the models are informed by or validated by novel experimental data; rationalization of a large body of existing experimental evidence and making testable predictions based on a model or simulation is often not considered sufficient.