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Structural differences between thermophilic and mesophilic membrane proteins SCIE SCOPUS

Title
Structural differences between thermophilic and mesophilic membrane proteins
Authors
Meruelo, ADHan, SKKim, SBowie, JU
Date Issued
2012-11
Publisher
Protein Society
Abstract
The evolutionary adaptations of thermophilic water-soluble proteins required for maintaining stability at high temperature have been extensively investigated. Little is known about the adaptations in membrane proteins, however. Here, we compare many properties of mesophilic and thermophilic membrane protein structures, including side-chain burial, packing, hydrogen bonding, transmembrane kinks, loop lengths, hydrophobicity, and other sequence features. Most of these properties are quite similar between mesophiles and thermophiles although we observe a slight increase in side-chain burial and possibly a slight decrease in the frequency of transmembrane kinks in thermophilic membrane protein structures. The most striking difference is the increased hydrophobicity of thermophilic transmembrane helices, possibly reflecting more stringent hydrophobicity requirements for membrane partitioning at high temperature. In agreement with prior work examining transmembrane sequences, we find that thermophiles have an increase in small residues (Gly, Ala, Ser, and Val) and a strong suppression of Cys. We also find a relative dearth of most strongly polar residues (Asp, Asn, Glu, Gln, and Arg). These results suggest that in thermophiles, there is significant evolutionary pressure to offload destabilizing polar amino acids, to decrease the entropy cost of side chain burial, and to eliminate thermally sensitive amino acids.
Keywords
stability; folding; structure; transmembrane helix; hydrogen bonds; polar amino acids; burial; kink; packing; HELIX-HELIX INTERACTIONS; THERMAL-STABILITY; HYDROGEN-BONDS; TRANSMEMBRANE HELICES; ALPHA-HELICES; THERMOSTABILITY; PACKING; STABILIZATION; RECOGNITION; PEPTIDES
URI
https://oasis.postech.ac.kr/handle/2014.oak/16184
DOI
10.1002/PRO.2157
ISSN
0961-8368
Article Type
Article
Citation
PROTEIN SCIENCE, vol. 21, no. 11, page. 1746 - 1753, 2012-11
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김상욱KIM, SANGUK
Dept of Life Sciences
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