1 / 30

Melissa David Adam Ossin Rutger Mantingh Supervisor: Antoinette Killian

Melissa David Adam Ossin Rutger Mantingh Supervisor: Antoinette Killian. Introduction. Periplasm. Inner membrane. Cytoplasm. Integral membrane proteins in Escherichia coli cells Located in the inner membrane of cell wall Vital for cellular functions Difficult to study

chenoa
Download Presentation

Melissa David Adam Ossin Rutger Mantingh Supervisor: Antoinette Killian

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Melissa David Adam Ossin Rutger Mantingh Supervisor: Antoinette Killian

  2. Introduction Periplasm Inner membrane Cytoplasm Integral membrane proteins • in Escherichia coli cells • Located in the inner membrane of cell wall • Vital for cellular functions • Difficult to study • Due to hydrophobic and amphiphilic nature • Less than 1% of high resolution 3D structures known

  3. Which alternative method could be used to study integral proteins? Membrane topology prediction

  4. Topology model • Membrane topology describes which regions of a polypeptide spans the cell membrane • Membrane topology can be predicted • protein sequence • Membranes were thought to have only one topology

  5. How did they prove that dual topology proteins may exist? With the use of (K + R) biases as determinant for membrane protein topology

  6. (K + R) bias determination • Orientation of membrane is determined • Loops in cytoplasm has more positive charged residues (‘positive-inside rule’) • Effect of single positively charged residue • (K+R) bias close to zero  change in orientation of protein • Considerable (K+R) bias  no effect on orientation of protein

  7. Dual topology proteins • Dual topology membrane proteins • Inserts into the membrane in 2 opposite orientation • Five candidates for dual-topology: • EmrE, SugE, CrcB, YdgC, YnfA • features of these proteins • Quite small ~ 100 amino acid residues • 4 transmembrane helices • Only few positively charged lysine and arginine residues • Very small (K + R) bias between loops

  8. Evolutionary relationship of membrane proteins

  9. Hypothesis • Dual topology proteins have no or a very small positive amino acid bias. Therefore, adding or subtracting a single positive amino acid will result in topology changes.

  10. PhoA PhoA GFP GFP Methods(1) How to determine topology? • Fusion proteins on C-terminus: • PhoA: enzymatically active only in the preiplasm • GFP: florescent only in cytoplasm

  11. Methods (2) • How to determine biases? • Unbiased proteins are incorporated either way (dual-topology) • Biased proteins are incorporated in one way

  12. Methods (3) Mutations Addition or substitution of/with positive amino acids (K + R)

  13. SugE and EmrE EmrE & SugE

  14. PhoA PhoA GFP GFP SugE and EmrE EmrE & SugE

  15. PhoA PhoA GFP GFP SugE and EmrE EmrE & SugE

  16. Control YdgE YdgF

  17. CrcB CrcB

  18. YnfA and YdgC YdgC YnfA

  19. Dual topology proteins: A single gene or a gene pair

  20. 225 fully sequenced genomes scanned for pairs and singletons Determination by : • SMR protein family • Both singletons and gene pairs • Singletons around (K+R) bias = 0 • Gene pairs bigger (K+R) bias

  21. (Leucine + Arginine) bias of “dual topology” proteins SMR protein family

  22. (Leucine + Arginine) bias of “dual topology” proteins CrcB protein family YnfA protein family YdgC protein family

  23. (Leusine + Arginine) bias of “dual topology” proteins YdgQ and YdgL protein family Not all proteins are dual topology proteins

  24. One protein, two orientations in the membrane DUF606 protein family Most proteins 4 or 5 trans membrane helices. Internally duplicated: 9 or 10 trans membrane helices

  25. Internally duplicated protein DUF606 10 Trans Membrane helices N-terminus C terminus 36% sequence identity

  26. Orientation of internally duplicated proteins 5 Trans membrane helices protein 4 Trans membrane helices protein

  27. Internal duplication topology

  28. Dual topology membrane proteins by different gene

  29. Discussion • Dual topology proteins myth or reality ?

  30. Discussion • Evolutionary path ?

More Related