A 'membrane protein' is a
protein molecule that is attached to, or associated with the
membrane of a
cell or an
organelle. More than half of all proteins interact with membranes. Membrane proteins can be classified into two groups, based on the strength of their association with the membrane.
Main categories
Integral membrane proteins are permanently attached to the membrane. They can be defined as those proteins which require a
detergent (such as
SDS or Triton X-100) or some other apolar solvent to be displaced. They can be classified according to their relationship with the bilayer:
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Transmembrane proteins span the entire membrane. The transmembrane regions of the proteins are either
beta-barrels or
alpha-helical. The alpha-helical domains are present in all types of
biological membranes including
outer membranes. The
beta-barrels were found only in
outer membranes of
Gram-negative bacteria,
cell wall of
Gram-positive bacteria, and
outer membranes of
mitochondria and
chloroplasts.
★ Integral monotopic proteins are permanently attached to the membrane from only one side.
Peripheral membrane proteins are temporarily attached either to the
lipid bilayer or to integral proteins by a combination of
hydrophobic,
electrostatic, and other non-covalent interactions. Peripheral proteins dissociate following treatment with a polar reagent, such as a solution with an elevated
pH or high salt concentrations.
Integral and peripheral proteins may be post-translationally modified, with added
fatty acid or
prenyl chains, or
GPI (glycosylphosphatidylinositol), which may be anchored in the lipid bilayer.
Classification of membrane proteins to integral and peripheral does not include some polypeptide toxins, such as
colicin A or alpha-hemolysin, and certain proteins involved in
apoptosis. These proteins are water-soluble but can aggregate and associate irreversibly with the lipid bilayer and form alpha-helical or
beta-barrel transmembrane channels. An alternative classification is to divide all membrane proteins to integral and ''amphitropic''
[1] The ''amphitropic'' are proteins that can exist in two alternative states: a water-soluble and a lipid bilayer-bound, whereas ''integral'' proteins can be found only in the membrane-bound state. The amphitropic protein category includes water-soluble channel-forming polypeptide toxins, which associate irreversibly with membranes, but excludes peripheral proteins that interact with other membrane proteins rather than with lipid bilayer.
Membrane-bound peptides
There are also numerous membrane-associated peptides, some of which are
nonribosomal peptides. They can form transmembrane channels (for example,
gramicidins and
peptaibols [2] [3]), travel across the membrane as
ionophores (
valinomycin and others), or associate with lipid bilayer surface, as
daptomycin and other
lipopeptides. These peptides are usually secreted. So, they probably should be classified as ''amphitropic'', although some of them are poorly soluble in water and associate with membrane irreversibly.
Further reading
★ ''Protein-lipid interactions'' (Ed. L.K. Tamm) Wiley, 2005.
★ Popot J-L. and Engelman D.M. 2000. Helical membrane protein folding, stability, and evolution. ''Annu. Rev. Biochem.'' 69: 881-922.
★ Bowie J.U. 2005. Solving the membrane protein folding problem. ''Nature'' 438: 581-589.
★ Cho, W. and Stahelin, R.V. 2005. Membrane-protein interactions in cell signaling and membrane trafficking. ''Annu. Rev. Biophys. Biomol. Struct.'' 34: 119–151.
★ Goni F.M. 2002. Non-permanent proteins in membranes: when proteins come as visitors. ''Mol. Membr. Biol.'' 19: 237-245.
★ Johnson J.E. and Cornell R.B. 1999. Amphitropic proteins: regulation by reversible membrane interactions. ''Mol. Membr. Biol.'' 16: 217-235.
★ Seaton B.A. and Roberts M.F. Peripheral membrane proteins. pp. 355-403. In ''Biological Membranes'' (Eds. K. Mertz and B.Roux), Birkhauser Boston, 1996.
See also
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Integral membrane proteins
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Transmembrane proteins
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Peripheral membrane proteins
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Ion pump (biology)
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Carrier protein
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Ion channel
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Receptor (biochemistry) (including
G protein-coupled receptor)
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External links
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General Principles of Membrane Protein Folding and Stability from Stephen White laboratory
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Orientations of Proteins in Membranes (OPM) database 3D structures of integral and amphitropic membrane proteins
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