Orientational Preferences of Neighboring Helices Can Drive ER Insertion of a Marginally Hydrophobic Transmembrane Helix — Karin Öjemalm (2012) | RDL Network
Orientational Preferences of Neighboring Helices Can Drive ER Insertion of a Marginally Hydrophobic Transmembrane Helix
Molecular Cell 45(4): 529-540
Article 2012 English
Authors
KÖ
Karin Öjemalm
KH
Katrin Halling
IN
IngMarie Nilsson
Abstract
1 min read
α-helical integral membrane proteins critically depend on the correct insertion of their transmembrane α helices into the lipid bilayer for proper folding, yet a surprisingly large fraction of the transmembrane α helices in multispanning integral membrane proteins are not sufficiently hydrophobic to insert into the target membrane by themselves. How can such marginally hydrophobic segments nevertheless form transmembrane helices in the folded structure? Here, we show that a transmembrane helix with a strong orientational preference (Ncyt-Clum or Nlum-Ccyt) can both increase and decrease the hydrophobicity threshold for membrane insertion of a neighboring, marginally hydrophobic helix. This effect helps explain the “missing hydrophobicity” in polytopic membrane proteins.
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