Understanding how cholesterol binds to mammalian cells offers critical insights into the waxy substance's role in protein modulation and cell function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPolar lipids and membrane proteins are major components of biological membranes, both cell membranes and membranes of enveloped viruses. How these two classes of membrane components interact with each other to influence the function of biological membranes is a fundamental question that has attracted intense interest since the origins of the field of membrane studies. One of the most powerful ideas that driven the field is the likelihood that lipids bind to membrane proteins at specific sites, modulating protein structure and function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Gram-negative bacterium, Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans, is a common inhabitant of the human upper aerodigestive tract. The organism produces an RTX (Repeats in ToXin) toxin (LtxA) that kills human white blood cells. LtxA is believed to be a membrane-damaging toxin, but details of the cell surface interaction for this and several other RTX toxins have yet to be elucidated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods Mol Biol
November 2010
Structural data on membrane proteins, while crucial to understanding cellular function, are scarce due to difficulties in applying to membrane proteins the common techniques of structural biology. Fragments of membrane proteins have been shown to reflect, in many cases, the secondary structure of the parent protein with fidelity and are more amenable to study. This chapter provides many examples of how the study of membrane protein fragments has provided new insight into the structure of the parent membrane protein.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPerturbations of the chemical shifts of a small subset of residues in the catalytically active domain of Escherichia coli signal peptidase I (SPase I) upon binding signal peptide suggest the contact surface on the enzyme for the substrate. SPase I, an integral membrane protein, is vital to preprotein transport in prokaryotic and eukaryotic secretory systems; it binds and proteolyses the N-terminal signal peptide of the preprotein, permitting folding and localization of the mature protein. Employing isotopically labeled C-terminal E.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUseful solution nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) data can be obtained from full-length, enzymatically active type I signal peptidase (SPase I), an integral membrane protein, in detergent micelles. Signal peptidase has two transmembrane segments, a short cytoplasmic loop, and a 27-kD C-terminal catalytic domain. It is a critical component of protein transport systems, recognizing and cleaving amino-terminal signal peptides from preproteins during the final stage of their export.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeripherin/rds (p/rds), an integral membrane protein from the transmembrane 4 (TMF4) superfamily, possesses a multi-functional C-terminal domain that plays crucial roles in rod outer segment (ROS) disk renewal and structure. Here, we report that the calcium binding protein calmodulin (CaM) binds to the C-terminal domain of p/rds. Fluorescence spectroscopy reveals Ca2+-dependent association of CaM with a polypeptide corresponding to the C-terminal domain of p/rds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe C-terminus of the intracellular retinal rod outer segment disk protein peripherin-2 binds to membranes, adopts a helical conformation, and promotes membrane fusion, which suggests an analogy to the structure and function of viral envelope fusion proteins. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) data and fluorescence data show that a 63-residue polypeptide comprising the C-terminus of bovine peripherin-2 (R284-G346) binds to the membrane mimetic, dodecylphosphocholine micelles. High-resolution NMR studies reveal that although this C-terminal fragment is unstructured in solution, the same fragment adopts helical structure when bound to the micelles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeripherin-2, the product of the rds gene, is a tetraspanin protein. In this study, we show that peripherin-2 forms a complex with melanoregulin (MREG), the product of the Mreg locus. Genetic studies suggest that MREG is involved in organelle biogenesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA novel mechanism for membrane modulation of transmembrane protein structure, and consequently function, is suggested in which mismatch between the hydrophobic surface of the protein and the hydrophobic interior of the lipid bilayer induces a flexing or bending of a transmembrane segment of the protein. Studies on model hydrophobic transmembrane peptides predict that helices tilt to submerge the hydrophobic surface within the lipid bilayer to satisfy the hydrophobic effect if the helix length exceeds the bilayer width. The hydrophobic surface of transmembrane helix 1 (TM1) of lactose permease, LacY, is accessible to the bilayer, and too long to be accommodated in the hydrophobic portion of a typical lipid bilayer if oriented perpendicular to the membrane surface.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBecause of their central role in regulation of cellular function, structure/function relationships for G-protein coupled receptors (GPCR) are of vital importance, yet only recently have sufficient data been obtained to begin mapping those relationships. GPCRs regulate a wide range of cellular processes, including the senses of taste, smell, and vision, and control a myriad of intracellular signaling systems in response to external stimuli. Many diseases are linked to GPCRs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCombining structure determinations from nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) data and molecular dynamics simulations (MD) under the same environmental conditions revealed a startling asymmetry in the intrinsic conformational stability of secondary structure in the transmembrane domain of lactose permease (LacY). Eleven fragments, corresponding to transmembrane segments (TMs) of LacY, were synthesized, and their secondary structure in solution was determined by NMR. Eight of the TMs contained significant regions of helical structure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe formation of photointermediates and conformational changes observed in the retinal chromophore of bilayer-embedded rhodopsin during the early steps of the protein activation have been studied by molecular dynamics (MD) simulation. In particular, the lysine-bound retinal has been examined, focusing on its conformation in the dark-adapted state (10 ns) and on the early steps after the isomerization of the 11-cis bond to trans (up to 10 ns). The parametrization for the chromophore is based on a recent quantum study [Sugihara, M.
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