AbstractMany attempts have been made to rationalize the use of detergents for membrane protein studies [J. Biol. Chem. 264 (1989) 4907]. The barrier properties of the detergent headgroup may be one parameter critically involved in protein protection. In this paper, we analyzed these properties using a model system, by comparing the accessibility of tryptophan octyl ester (TOE) to water-soluble collisional quenchers (iodide and acrylamide) in three detergent micelles. The detergents used differed only in the chemical nature of their polar headgroups, zwitterionic for dodecylphosphocholine (DPC) and nonionic for octa(ethylene glycol) dodecyl monoether (C12E8) and dodecylmaltoside (DM). In all cases, in phosphate buffer at pH 7.5, the binding ...
AbstractThe determination of the molecular weight of a membrane protein by sedimentation equilibrium...
AbstractMolecular dynamics simulations have been used to characterize the effects of transfer from a...
International audienceThis report is a follow up of our previous paper (Lund, Orlowski, de Foresta, ...
AbstractMany attempts have been made to rationalize the use of detergents for membrane protein studi...
AbstractThe fluorescence properties of tryptophan octyl ester (TOE), a hydrophobic model of Trp in p...
<div><p>Micelle-forming detergents provide an amphipathic environment that can mimic lipid bilayers ...
Micelle-forming detergents provide an amphipathic environment that can mimic lipid bilayers and are ...
Micelle-forming detergents provide an amphipathic environment that can mimic lipid bilayers and are ...
AbstractDetergents are indispensable in the isolation of integral membrane proteins from biological ...
AbstractMicellar solutions of lauryldimethylamine oxide, n-dodecyl-β-D-maltoside and 1-dodecanoylpro...
AbstractThe instability of membrane proteins in detergent solution can generally be traced to the di...
AbstractThe present study explores intermediate stages in detergent solubilization of liposomes and ...
To study integral membrane proteins, one has to extract them from the membrane—the step that is typi...
AbstractSeventeen different, chemically defined phosphatidylcholines, dispersed in aqueous medium in...
Abstract Interactions between membrane proteins and detergents are important in biophysical and stru...
AbstractThe determination of the molecular weight of a membrane protein by sedimentation equilibrium...
AbstractMolecular dynamics simulations have been used to characterize the effects of transfer from a...
International audienceThis report is a follow up of our previous paper (Lund, Orlowski, de Foresta, ...
AbstractMany attempts have been made to rationalize the use of detergents for membrane protein studi...
AbstractThe fluorescence properties of tryptophan octyl ester (TOE), a hydrophobic model of Trp in p...
<div><p>Micelle-forming detergents provide an amphipathic environment that can mimic lipid bilayers ...
Micelle-forming detergents provide an amphipathic environment that can mimic lipid bilayers and are ...
Micelle-forming detergents provide an amphipathic environment that can mimic lipid bilayers and are ...
AbstractDetergents are indispensable in the isolation of integral membrane proteins from biological ...
AbstractMicellar solutions of lauryldimethylamine oxide, n-dodecyl-β-D-maltoside and 1-dodecanoylpro...
AbstractThe instability of membrane proteins in detergent solution can generally be traced to the di...
AbstractThe present study explores intermediate stages in detergent solubilization of liposomes and ...
To study integral membrane proteins, one has to extract them from the membrane—the step that is typi...
AbstractSeventeen different, chemically defined phosphatidylcholines, dispersed in aqueous medium in...
Abstract Interactions between membrane proteins and detergents are important in biophysical and stru...
AbstractThe determination of the molecular weight of a membrane protein by sedimentation equilibrium...
AbstractMolecular dynamics simulations have been used to characterize the effects of transfer from a...
International audienceThis report is a follow up of our previous paper (Lund, Orlowski, de Foresta, ...