2005Lanzavecchia Conical

From 3DEM-Methods
Jump to: navigation, search

Citation

Lanzavecchia S, Cantele F, Bellon PL, Zampighi L, Kreman M, Wright E, Zampighi GA (2005) Conical tomography of freeze-fracture replicas: a method for the study of integral membrane proteins inserted in phospholipid bilayers. J Struct Biol 149:87–98

Cited by

Abstract

We have used conical tomography to study the structure of integral proteins in their phospholipid bilayer environments. Complete conical series were collected from replicas of the water channel aquaporin-0 (AQP0), a 6.6 nm side tetramer with a molecular weight of approximately 120 kDa that was purified and reconstituted in liposomes. The replicas were tilted at 38 degrees , 50 degrees or 55 degrees and rotated by 2.5 degrees , 4 degrees , or 5 degrees increments until completing 360 degrees turns. The elliptical paths of between 6 and 12 freeze-fracture particles aligned the images to a common coordinate system. Using the weighted back projection algorithm, small volumes of the replicas were independently reconstructed to reconstitute the field. Using the Fourier Shell Correlation computed from reconstructions of even and odd projections of the series, we estimated a resolution of 2-3 nm, a value that was close to the thickness of the replica (approximately 1.5 nm). The 3D reconstructions exhibited isotropic resolution along the x-y plane, which simplified the analysis of particles oriented randomly in the membrane plane. In contrast to reconstructions from single particles imaged using random conical tilt [J. Mol. Biol. 325 (2003) 210], the reconstructions using conical tomography allowed the size and shape of individual particles representing the AQP0 channel to be identified without averaging or imposing symmetry. In conclusion, the reconstruction of freeze-fracture replicas with electron tomography has provided a novel experimental approach for the study of integral proteins inserted in phospholipid bilayers.

Keywords

Collection geometry, missing cone

Links

Article http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15629660

Related software

Related methods

Comments