An
Integral Membrane Protein (
IMP) is a
protein molecule (or assembly of proteins) that is permanently attached to the
biological membrane. Such proteins can be separated from the biological membranes only using
detergents,
nonpolar solvents, or sometimes
denaturing agents.
IMPs comprise a very significant fraction of the proteins encoded in the genome.
Structure
Three-dimensional structures of only ~160 different integral membrane proteins are currently determined at atomic resolution by
X-ray crystallography or
Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy due to the difficulties with extraction and crystallization. In addition, structures of many water-soluble domains of IMPs are available in the
Protein Data Bank. Their membrane-anchoring α-helices have been removed to facilitate the extraction and crystallization.
IMPs can be divided into two groups:
- Transmembrane proteins
- Integral monotopic proteins
Integral transmembrane protein
The most common type of IMP is the
transmembrane protein (TM), which spans the entire
biological membrane. Such a protein may cross the membrane only once or it may weave in and out, crossing several times. TM proteins can be categorized as Type I, which are positioned such that their amino-terminus is outside of the membrane, or Type II, which have their carboxy-terminus outside of the membrane.
Integral monotopic proteins
Integral monotopic proteins are permanently attached to the membrane from one side.
Three-dimensional structures of the following integral monotopic proteins have been determined:
There are also structures of integral monotopic domains of transmembrane proteins:
Such domains require detergents for extraction or crystallization, even after removal of their transmembrane helices. Therefore, they are often classified as integral monotopic proteins
Function
IMPs include
transporters,
channels,
receptors,
enzymes, structural membrane-anchoring domains, proteins involved in accumulation and
transduction of energy, and proteins responsible for
cell adhesion. Classification of transporters can be found in
TCDB database
References
- Booth, P.J., Templer, R.H., Meijberg, W., Allen, S.J., Curran, A.R., and Lorch, M. 2001. In vitro studies of membrane protein folding. Crit. Rev. Biochem. Mol. Biol. 36: 501-603.
- Bracey M.H., Cravatt B.F., Stevens R.C., Cravatt B.F. 2004. Structural commonalities among integral membrane enzymes. FEBS Lett. 567: 159-165.
- Bowie J.U. 2001. Stabilizing membrane proteins. Curr. Op. Struct. Biol. 11: 397-402.
- Bowie J.U. 2005. Solving the membrane protein folding problem. Nature 438: 581-589.
- DeGrado W.F., Gratkowski H. and Lear J.D. 2003. How do helix-helix interactions help determine the folds of membrane proteins? Perspectives from the study of homo-oligomeric helical bundles. Protein Sci. 12: 647-665.
- Popot J-L. and Engelman D.M. 2000. Helical membrane protein folding, stability, and evolution. Annu. Rev. Biochem. 69: 881-922.
- Protein-lipid interactions (Ed. L.K. Tamm) Wiley, 2005.
See also
Examples
Examples of integral membrane proteins:
External links