Properties of integral membrane protein structures: derivation of an implicit membrane potential.

Distributions of each amino acid in the trans-membrane domain were calculated as a function of the membrane normal using all currently available alpha-helical membrane protein structures with resolutions better than 4 A. The results were compared with previous sequence- and structure-based analyses....

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Main Authors: Ulmschneider, M, Sansom, MS, Di Nola, A
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2005
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author Ulmschneider, M
Sansom, MS
Di Nola, A
author_facet Ulmschneider, M
Sansom, MS
Di Nola, A
author_sort Ulmschneider, M
collection OXFORD
description Distributions of each amino acid in the trans-membrane domain were calculated as a function of the membrane normal using all currently available alpha-helical membrane protein structures with resolutions better than 4 A. The results were compared with previous sequence- and structure-based analyses. Calculation of the average hydrophobicity along the membrane normal demonstrated that the protein surface in the membrane domain is in fact much more hydrophobic than the protein core. While hydrophobic residues dominate the membrane domain, the interfacial regions of membrane proteins were found to be abundant in the small residues glycine, alanine, and serine, consistent with previous studies on membrane protein packing. Charged residues displayed nonsymmetric distributions with a preference for the intracellular interface. This effect was more prominent for Arg and Lys resulting in a direct confirmation of the positive inside rule. Potentials of mean force along the membrane normal were derived for each amino acid by fitting Gaussian functions to the residue distributions. The individual potentials agree well with experimental and theoretical considerations. The resulting implicit membrane potential was tested on various membrane proteins as well as single trans-membrane alpha-helices. All membrane proteins were found to be at an energy minimum when correctly inserted into the membrane. For alpha-helices both interfacial (i.e. surface bound) and inserted configurations were found to correspond to energy minima. The results demonstrate that the use of trans-membrane amino acid distributions to derive an implicit membrane representation yields meaningful residue potentials.
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spelling oxford-uuid:aa77718f-c845-4f1d-b7a5-1bdc0ff1aa882022-03-27T03:15:14ZProperties of integral membrane protein structures: derivation of an implicit membrane potential.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:aa77718f-c845-4f1d-b7a5-1bdc0ff1aa88EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2005Ulmschneider, MSansom, MSDi Nola, ADistributions of each amino acid in the trans-membrane domain were calculated as a function of the membrane normal using all currently available alpha-helical membrane protein structures with resolutions better than 4 A. The results were compared with previous sequence- and structure-based analyses. Calculation of the average hydrophobicity along the membrane normal demonstrated that the protein surface in the membrane domain is in fact much more hydrophobic than the protein core. While hydrophobic residues dominate the membrane domain, the interfacial regions of membrane proteins were found to be abundant in the small residues glycine, alanine, and serine, consistent with previous studies on membrane protein packing. Charged residues displayed nonsymmetric distributions with a preference for the intracellular interface. This effect was more prominent for Arg and Lys resulting in a direct confirmation of the positive inside rule. Potentials of mean force along the membrane normal were derived for each amino acid by fitting Gaussian functions to the residue distributions. The individual potentials agree well with experimental and theoretical considerations. The resulting implicit membrane potential was tested on various membrane proteins as well as single trans-membrane alpha-helices. All membrane proteins were found to be at an energy minimum when correctly inserted into the membrane. For alpha-helices both interfacial (i.e. surface bound) and inserted configurations were found to correspond to energy minima. The results demonstrate that the use of trans-membrane amino acid distributions to derive an implicit membrane representation yields meaningful residue potentials.
spellingShingle Ulmschneider, M
Sansom, MS
Di Nola, A
Properties of integral membrane protein structures: derivation of an implicit membrane potential.
title Properties of integral membrane protein structures: derivation of an implicit membrane potential.
title_full Properties of integral membrane protein structures: derivation of an implicit membrane potential.
title_fullStr Properties of integral membrane protein structures: derivation of an implicit membrane potential.
title_full_unstemmed Properties of integral membrane protein structures: derivation of an implicit membrane potential.
title_short Properties of integral membrane protein structures: derivation of an implicit membrane potential.
title_sort properties of integral membrane protein structures derivation of an implicit membrane potential
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