- Zheng, Liming;
- Xu, Jie;
- Wang, Weihua;
- Gao, Xiaoyin;
- Zhao, Chao;
- Guo, Weijun;
- Sun, Luzhao;
- Cheng, Hang;
- Meng, Fanhao;
- Chen, Buhang;
- Sun, Weiyu;
- Jia, Xia;
- Zhou, Xiong;
- Wu, Kai;
- Liu, Zhongfan;
- Ding, Feng;
- Liu, Nan;
- Wang, Hong-Wei;
- Peng, Hailin
Cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) has been widely used to reveal the structures of proteins at atomic resolution. One key challenge is that almost all proteins are predominantly adsorbed to the air-water interface during standard cryo-EM specimen preparation. The interaction of proteins with air-water interface will significantly impede the success of reconstruction and achievable resolution. Here, we highlight the critical role of impenetrable surfactant monolayers in passivating the air-water interface problems, and develop a robust effective method for high-resolution cryo-EM analysis, by using the superstructure GSAMs which comprises surfactant self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) and graphene membrane. The GSAMs works well in enriching the orientations and improving particle utilization ratio of multiple proteins, facilitating the 3.3-Å resolution reconstruction of a 100-kDa protein complex (ACE2-RBD), which shows strong preferential orientation using traditional specimen preparation protocol. Additionally, we demonstrate that GSAMs enables the successful determinations of small proteins (<100 kDa) at near-atomic resolution. This study expands the understanding of SAMs and provides a key to better control the interaction of protein with air-water interface.