Outer membrane protein A (OmpA) of Escherichia
coli is a β-barrel membrane protein that unfolds
in 8 M urea to a random coil. OmpA refolds upon urea dilution
in the presence of certain detergents or lipids. To examine
the minimal requirements for secondary and tertiary structure
formation in β-barrel membrane proteins, folding of
OmpA was studied as a function of the hydrophobic chain
length, the chemical structure of the polar headgroup,
and the concentration of a large array of amphiphiles.
OmpA folded in the presence of detergents only above a
critical minimal chain length of the apolar chain as determined
by circular dichroism spectroscopy and a SDS-PAGE assay
that measures tertiary structure formation. Details of
the chemical structure of the polar headgroup were unimportant
for folding. The minimal chain length required for folding
correlated with the critical micelle concentration in each
detergent series. Therefore, OmpA requires preformed detergent
micelles for folding and does not adsorb monomeric detergent
to its perimeter after folding. Formation of secondary
and tertiary structure is thermodynamically coupled and
strictly dependent on the interaction with aggregated amphiphiles.