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The FASEB Journal, Vol 6, 3397-3402, Copyright © 1992 by The Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology


REVIEWS

Forces involved in the assembly and stabilization of membrane proteins

WA Cramer, DM Engelman, G Von Heijne and DC Rees
Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907.

Hydrophobic organization: Determination of the structure of the bacterial photosynthetic reaction center, bacterial porins, and bacteriorhodopsin allows a comparison of the basic structural features of integral membrane proteins. Structure parameters of membrane- and water-soluble proteins are surprisingly similar, given the different dielectric environments, except for the polarity of residues on the protein surface. Hydrophobic and electrostatic forces: 1) Intramembrane helix-helix interactions that are sensitive to small structure changes can dictate assembly of membrane proteins, as indicated by reconstitution of bacteriorhodopsin from proteolytic fragments and specific dimer formation of the human erythrocyte sialoglycoprotein glycophorin A. 2) Electrostatic interactions have an important role in determining the trans-membrane orientation of integral membrane proteins of the bacterial inner membrane, as expressed by the "positive- inside" rule for the distribution of basic residues on the cis relative to the trans side of the membrane-spanning alpha-helices. The use of this charge asymmetry rule, in conjunction with a hydrophobicity algorithm for prediction of membrane-spanning domains, allows accurate prediction of the folding patterns of such polypeptides across the membrane. A role of electrostatic interactions in assembly and maintenance of the structure of oligomeric integral membrane protein complexes is also implied by the separation and extrusion from the membrane, at high pH, of the major hydrophobic subunits of the cytochrome b6f complex from the chloroplast thylakoid membrane. It is inferred that the hydrophobic helix-helix interactions between the subunits of this complex, whose function is electron transfer and proton translocation, are relatively weak compared to those in bacteriorhodopsin.


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Copyright © 1992 by The Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology.