When Membrane Proteins Prefer Lipids

December 04, 2025 Written by CAS Communication Staff

Dimerization of a chloride transporter is driven by preferential solvation rather than high-affinity lipid binding

Edward Lyman, associate professor in the departments of physics and astronomy, as well as chemistry and biochemistry, was recently published in the journal Nature Chemical Biology.

The article, “When Membrane Proteins Prefer Lipids,” examines how membrane protein function is shaped by the surrounding lipid environment, a relationship previously thought to result from high-affinity, ligand-like binding at specific lipid sites.

Through a combination of long-timescale molecular dynamics simulations, alchemical free-energy calculations, and single-molecule FRET experiments, the study shows that the dimerization of the chloride transporter CLC-ec1 is instead controlled by a preferential solvation mechanism. This mechanism relies on the collective effects of the lipid environment rather than individual, tightly bound lipids, revealing a system-level property of membrane regulation.

The research provides a rigorous demonstration of how lipid composition influences protein folding, assembly, and function, setting a new standard for mechanistic studies in the field of membrane biology. By integrating computational and experimental approaches, the study clarifies the fundamental principles linking lipids and protein activity, emphasizing the importance of solvation effects over classical high-affinity binding models.


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