Transmembrane domain
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Integral membrane proteins account for 20–30% of protein-coding genes and play critical roles in cellular functions such as signal transduction, molecular transport, and cell adhesion.[1] The transmembrane domain (TMD) is made up mostly of hydrophobic amino acids and spans the cellular or organelle membrane, generally adopting an alpha helix topological conformation.[2] TMDs vary greatly in length, sequence, and hydrophobicity, adopting organelle-specific properties.[1]
Identification of transmembrane helices
Transmembrane helices are visible in structures of membrane proteins determined by X-ray diffraction. They may also be predicted on the basis of hydrophobicity scales. Because the interior of the bilayer and the interiors of most proteins of known structure are hydrophobic, it is presumed to be a requirement of the amino acids that span a membrane that they be hydrophobic as well. However, membrane pumps and ion channels also contain numerous charged and polar residues within the generally non-polar transmembrane segments.
Using hydrophobicity analysis to predict transmembrane helices enables a prediction in turn of the "transmembrane topology" of a protein; i.e. prediction of what parts of it protrude into the cell, what parts protrude out, and how many times the protein chain crosses the membrane.
Transmembrane helices can also be identified in silico using the bioinformatic tool, TMHMM.[3]
The role of membrane protein biogenesis and quality control factors
Since protein translation occurs in the cytosol (an aqueous environment), factors that recognize the TMD and protect them in this hostile environment are required. Additional factors that allow the TMD to be incorporated into the target membrane (i.e. endoplasmic reticulum or other organelles) are also required.[1] Factors also detect TMD misfolding within the membrane and perform quality control functions. These factors must be able to recognize a highly variable set of TMDs and can be segregated into those active in the cytosol or active in the membrane.[1]
Cytosolic Recognition Factors
Cytosolic recognition factors are thought to use two distinct strategies.[1] In the co-translational strategy the recognition and shielding are coupled to protein synthesis. Genome wide association studies indicate the majority of membrane proteins targeting the endoplasmic reticulum are handled by the signal recognition particle which is bound to the ribosomal exit tunnel and initiates recognition and shielding as protein is translated. The second strategy involves tail-anchored proteins, defined by a single TMD located close to the carboxyl terminus of the membrane protein. Once translation is completed, the tail-anchored TMD remains in the ribosomal exit tunnel, and an ATPase mediates targeting to the endoplasmic reticulum. Examples of shuttling factors include TRC40 in higher eukaryotes and Get3 in yeast. Furthermore, general TMD-binding factors protect against aggregation and other disrupting interactions. SGTA and calmodulin are two well-known general TMD-binding factors. Quality control of membrane proteins involve TMD-binding factors that are linked to ubiquitination proteasome system.
Membrane Recognition Factors
Once transported, factors assist with insertion of the TMD across the hydrophilic layer phosphate "head" group of the phospholipid membrane.[1] Quality control factors must be able to discern function and topology, as well as facilitate extraction to the cytosol. The signal recognition particle transports membrane proteins to the Sec translocation channel, positioning the ribosome exit tunnel proximal to the translocon central pore and minimizing exposure of the TMD to cytosol. Insertases can also mediate TMD insertion into the lipid bilayer. Insertases include the bacterial YidC, mitochondrial Oxa1, and chloroplast Alb3, all of which are evolutionarily related. The conserved Hrd1 and Derlin enzyme families are examples of membrane bound quality control factors.
Examples
- Tetraspanins have 4 conserved transmembrane domains.
- Mildew locus o (mlo) proteins have 7 conserved transmembrane domains that encode alpha helices.[4]
References
- ^ a b c d e f Guna, Alina; Hegde, Ramanujan S. (2018-04-23). "Transmembrane Domain Recognition during Membrane Protein Biogenesis and Quality Control". Current biology: CB. 28 (8): R498 – R511. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2018.02.004. ISSN 1879-0445. PMID 29689233.
- ^ Sharpe, Hayley J.; Stevens, Tim J.; Munro, Sean (2010-07-09). "A Comprehensive Comparison of Transmembrane Domains Reveals Organelle-Specific Properties". Cell. 142 (1): 158–169. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2010.05.037. ISSN 0092-8674. PMC 2928124. PMID 20603021.
- ^ Krogh A, Larsson B, von Heijne G, Sonnhammer EL (January 2001). "Predicting transmembrane protein topology with a hidden Markov model: application to complete genomes". Journal of Molecular Biology. 305 (3): 567–80. doi:10.1006/jmbi.2000.4315. PMID 11152613.
- ^ Devoto A, Hartmann HA, Piffanelli P, Elliott C, Simmons C, Taramino G, et al. (January 2003). "Molecular phylogeny and evolution of the plant-specific seven-transmembrane MLO family". Journal of Molecular Evolution. 56 (1): 77–88. doi:10.1007/s00239-002-2382-5. PMID 12569425.