The ABC transporter MsbA in a dozen environments.
Hoffmann, L., Baier, A., Jorde, L., Kamel, M., Schafer, J.H., Schnelle, K., Scholz, A., Shvarev, D., Wong, J.E.M.M., Parey, K., Januliene, D., Moeller, A.(2025) Structure 
- PubMed: 40056915 
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.str.2025.02.002
- Primary Citation of Related Structures:  
9FUQ, 9FUR, 9FUS, 9FUT, 9FUU, 9FUV, 9FUW, 9FUY, 9FUZ, 9FV0, 9FV1, 9FV2, 9FV3, 9FV4, 9FV5, 9FV6, 9FV7, 9FV8, 9FV9, 9FVA - PubMed Abstract: 
High-resolution structure determination of membrane proteins typically requires reconstitution into artificial membrane mimics. The choice of the specific membrane substitute can strongly affect the protein's specific activity, stability, and conformational spectrum, potentially leading to errors or misinterpretation during analysis. The bacterial ATP-binding cassette transporter MsbA is a prominent example of such environment-specific bias. Here, we present a systematic analysis of the conformational spectrum of MsbA, stabilized in a dozen environments, using cryoelectron microscopy (cryo-EM), and show pronounced feedback between the membrane mimetics and the transporter. Detergents generally favor wide inward-facing conformations while nanodiscs induce narrower conformations. Notably, only in three tested environments, MsbA samples the full movement of the nucleotide-binding domains, including narrow and wide conformations. We expect this study to serve as a blueprint for other membrane proteins, even where a structural reaction to the hydrophobic environment is not directly visible but still critical for the proteins' function.
Organizational Affiliation: 
Osnabrück University, Department of Biology/Chemistry, Structural Biology Section, 49076 Osnabrück, Germany.