textjournal article
In Vitro Reconstitution of Eukaryotic Ion Channels Using Droplet Interface Bilayers
Abstract
The ability to routinely study eukaryotic ion channels in a synthetic lipid environment would have a major impact on our understanding of how different lipids influence ion channel function. Here, we describe a straightforward, detergent-free method for the in vitro reconstitution of eukaryotic ion channels and ionotropic receptors into droplet interface bilayers and measure their electrical activity at both the macroscopic and single-channel level. We explore the general applicability of this method by reconstitution of channels from a wide range of sources including recombinant cell lines and native tissues, as well as preparations that are difficult to study by conventional methods including erythrocytes and mitochondria- Text
- Journal contribution
- Biophysics
- Biochemistry
- Cell Biology
- Physiology
- Biotechnology
- Physical Sciences not elsewhere classified
- lipid environment
- reconstitution
- study eukaryotic ion channels
- Droplet Interface BilayersThe ability
- method
- lipids influence ion channel function
- droplet interface bilayers
- ionotropic receptors
- Eukaryotic Ion Channels
- Vitro Reconstitution
- eukaryotic ion channels
- cell lines