“…KBP is important in a number of cellular processes, including neuronal development, spermatogenesis and mitosis, and its mutation causes Goldberg-Shprintzen syndrome (GOSHS; Alves et al, 2010;Brooks et al, 2005;Dafsari et al, 2015;Drerup et al, 2016;Lehti et al, 2013;Lyons et al, 2008;Malaby et al, 2019;Salehpour et al, 2017;Valence et al, 2013). KBP functions as a selective inhibitor of microtubule attachment of a subset of kinesin motor proteins (Kevenaar et al, 2016;Wozniak et al, 2005), and our recent structural work describes the inhibitory mechanism of KBP (Atherton et al, 2020). Here, we describe a number of effects on our samples derived from protein-surface interactions during cryo-EM sample preparation that we hope will be informative to other researchers in the field: (i) partial denaturation of KBP, likely due to interactions with the air-water ISSN 2059-7983 interface, (ii) the protection of KBP from partial denaturation by adherence to a graphene oxide (GO) substrate away from the air-water interface, (iii) changes to KBP angular distributions introduced by adherence to GO, (iv) aggregation in KBP-kinesin motor domain (MD) complexes resulting from interactions with a carbon grid support, which was not observed on a gold grid support, and (v) different behaviors of two KBP-kinesin motor domain (MD) complexes on a GO substrate.…”