research papers
Membrane proteins: structure and function
aInstitute for Protein Research, Osaka University, 3-2 Yamadaoka, Suita, Osaka 565-0871, Japan
*Correspondence e-mail: tsuki@protein.osaka-u.ac.jp
Proteins residing in the lipid bilayer of a membrane surrounding a biological compartment make it possible for the compartment to engage in specialized functions. Since the determination of the X-ray structure of the bacterial photoreaction centre, high-resolution structures for more than 15 integral membrane proteins have been elucidated, mainly by X-ray and partly by electron diffraction methods. The energy-conversion systems, namely those involving photosynthesis and respiration, contain various kinds of integral membrane proteins. The transmembrane parts of these membrane proteins fold into α-helices. Proton and within the molecules have been inferred by inspecting the structures. Channels through which chemical substances are translocated selectively have important roles in various biological processes, such as and signalling. Two structural architectures are known for the channels. One is an antiparallel β-barrel consisting of 14–22 strands and the other is α-helical consisting of eight to ten α-helices. Each channel has a structure suitable for selective transfer of a specific substance. Two types of anchoring architectures have been elucidated by the X-ray method. Prostaglandin H2 synthase-1 has helical anchors located with parallel orientation along and closely following the membrane surface. OmpA has an anchor domain arranged in the form of an antiparallel β-barrel consisting of eight strands.
Keywords: membrane proteins; crystal structures; X-ray diffraction; electron diffraction; protein structures; protein functions.
1. Introduction
Living things have various kinds of membranes surrounding the compartments. The compartments can enclose a cell, plasma, nucleus, endoplasmic reticulum, golgi apparatus, lysosome, etc. All biological membranes have a common structure, consisting of a thin film of about 50 Å in thickness and made up of lipid and protein molecules. Proteins attached to the membranes make it possible for the compartments to undertake specialized functions. The proteins are associated with membranes in different ways. Integral membrane proteins have a polypeptide segment which extends through, or is buried in, the lipid bilayer. They cannot be released from the membrane without detergents. Some membrane proteins that do not extend into the lipid bilayer are bound to the membrane by non-covalent interaction with the integral membrane proteins. These proteins are referred to as peripheral membrane proteins, which can be released from the membrane by more gentle procedures than integral membrane proteins. The other membrane proteins are bound to the lipid bilayer by covalent linkage, which anchors the protein to the membrane. These proteins are as hydrophilic as a water-soluble protein and can be released by cleaving a between the protein and a fatty acid molecule.
endosome, mitochondrion, chloroplast, thylakoidWe have previously reviewed the structural features of the integral membrane proteins determined at high resolution by X-ray and electron crystallographic methods (Sakai & Tsukihara, 1998). The membrane proteins play key roles in various biological processes. The integral membrane proteins are classified into three categories, namely monotopic, bitopic and polytopic, according to their membrane-spanning topology as shown in Fig. 1 (Blobel, 1980). Although the known structures of membrane proteins are few compared with those of water-soluble proteins, a close analysis of each of the structures allows us to understand more deeply the molecular mechanism of how membrane proteins function. The structure–function relationships of the integral membrane proteins so far determined by X-ray and electron crystallographic methods are described in this paper.
2. Membrane proteins in solar energy conversion systems
Although chemical substances making up food are the immediate source of energy, the ultimate energy source for most living things is light. Plants and some bacteria fix light energy by employing several protein-pigment complexes arranged in membranes. Reaction centres (RCs) are the sites of energy conversion where light-induced charge separation takes place. Rhodopseudomonas viridis, a photosynthetic bacterium, was a seminal event in stimulating X-ray crystallographic studies of membrane proteins (Deisenhofer et al., 1984). Light-harvesting complexes, which collect solar energy and transfer it efficiently to the RCs, are the other protein-pigment complexes that make up photosynthetic membranes.
determination of the RC ofThe three-dimensional structure of R. viridis RC has been refined at 2.3 Å resolution (Deisenhofer et al., 1995). The RC consists of four protein subunits, L, M, H and cytochrome with four c-type heme groups. Other prosthetic groups are four bacteriochlorophyll (Bch) b, two bacteriopheophythin (Bph) b, two one non-heme ferrous iron and one carotenoid. The structures of the L, H and M subunits, as well as those of the prosthetic groups, are illustrated in Fig. 2. Electrons of Bch molecules excited by solar energy are transferred to an exchangeable quinone via Bch b, Bph b and tightly bound quinone to generate charge separation within the complex. The quinone, with high-energy electrons, reduces cytochrome b6-f, a photosynthetic complex, producing a proton gradient across the membrane. In addition to the RCs of R. viridis (Deisenhofer et al., 1984, 1985, 1995) and Rhodobactor sphaeroides (Allen et al., 1987; Ermler et al., 1994), the X-ray structures of bacterial antenna complexes (LH2) from Rhodopseudomonas acidophila (McDermott et al., 1995) and Rhodospirillum molischianum (Koepke et al., 1996) have been determined at resolutions of 2.5 and 2.4 Å, respectively. The cylindrical structure of LH2 from R. acidophila is depicted in Fig. 3. The transmembrane helices of nine α-proteins are packed side by side to form a cylinder with a radius of 18 Å. The nine helical β-apoproteins are arranged radially with the α-apoproteins to form an outer cylinder with a radius of 34 Å. Both subunits are small proteins comprising of about 50 amino acid residues. The light-absorbing pigments, Bch a and are non-covalently bound to the α- and β-apoproteins. The structure of R. molischianum LH2 exhibits cylindrical architecture similar to that of R. acidophila LH2. The R. molischianum LH2 is an αβ-octamer in contrast to a nonamer for the R. acidophila LH2.
The 8.5 Å projection map of the light-harvesting complex I (LH1) of Rhodospirillum rubrum obtained by electron crystallographic methods shows 16 αβ-subunits in a 116 Å outer-diameter ring with a 68 Å hole in the centre, as shown in Fig. 4 (Karrasch et al., 1995). LH1 can accommodate an RC molecule in the hole. Fig. 5 is a schematic diagram showing the arrangement of the antenna complexes, LH1 and LH2, and RC, and the flow of in the photosynthetic membrane (Kuhlbrandt, 1995). The well organized arrangement allows the cell to achieve high efficiency in solar energy conversion.
Plants as well as cyanobacteria have another solar energy conversion system in the photosynthetic membrane. The light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b-protein complex (LHC-II) associated with photosystem II is involved in plant-type photosynthesis. The structure of LHC-II was determined at 3.4 Å resolution by electron crystallography of a two-dimensional crystal (Kuhlbrandt et al., 1994) prior to analyses of the bacterial light-harvesting antenna complexes, LH1 and LH2. Each apoprotein of 232 amino acids has three transmembrane α-helices binding 12 chlorophylls and two The X-ray structure of photosystem I (PSI) of Synechococcus elongatus was determined at 4 Å resolution (Krauss et al., 1996). The PSI with a trimeric structure has 31 transmembrane α-helices and light-harvesting pigments in the monomer. The structural model reveals a joint photosynthetic RC and light-harvesting antenna system. Higher-resolution analysis of the PSI as well as that of PSII are awaited with great interest.
Halobacteria utilize solar energy by a different process from photosynthesis. Bacteriorhodopsin, a protein residing in the cell membrane, pumps protons from the cytoplasm to the extra cellular space to generate a proton gradient which is used for ATP synthesis. Several atomic coordinates of the membrane protein, determined by X-ray and electron crystallographic methods, have been deposited in the Protein Data Bank (PDB) (Bernstein et al., 1977; Abola et al., 1987). Three structural models of the transmembrane region consisting of seven α-helices coincide well with one another, despite some conformational differences on both sides of the membrane among these models (Grigorieff et al., 1996; Pebay-Peyroula et al., 1997; Kimura et al., 1997). A possible pathway of the proton in bacteriorhodopsin of Halobacterium salinarium is shown in Fig. 6 (Kimura et al., 1997). A chromophore, retinal in an all-trans conformation, is attached to protonated Lys216 by a Schiff base. Once light is absorbed, the retinal is isomerized from all-trans to the 13-cis conformation. This isomerization facilitates proton translocation from Lys216 to Asp 85, followed by the release of a proton to the extra cellular space via Glu204. Then, Lys216 accepts a proton from Asp96, and 13-cis retinal is converted to an all-trans conformation to form the Schiff base with Lys216. The proton pumping cycle is concluded by proton transfer from the cytoplasmic space to Asp96 (Henderson et al., 1990; Kimura et al., 1997).
3. Membrane proteins of the respiratory chain
Mitochondria, which are present in all eucaryotic cells and some bacteria, convert energy from chemical fuels into the useful form of ATP. Respiratory enzyme complexes residing in the mitochondrial inner membrane are shown in Fig. 7. The X-ray structures of complexes III, cytochrome bc1, have been determined independently by three groups (Xia et al., 1997; Zhang et al., 1998; Iwata et al., 1998). The cytochrome bc1 transfers electrons from an ubiquinol to a soluble cytochrome c in the intermembrane space and pumps protons from the matrix space to the intermembrane space to create a proton Bovine heart cytochrome bc1 complex is a dimer, with each monomer made up of 11 different subunits. Each monomer contains four redox centres, consisting of two heme groups, bH and bL of cytochrome b, one heme group in cytochrome c1 and one Fe–S cluster of Rieske protein, as shown in Fig. 8. X-ray structures of the complex III in both the presence and absence of inhibitors of quinone oxidation reveal two different locations for the Fe–S domain of the Rieske protein (Fig. 9). One location of the Fe–S cluster is close enough to the supposed quinol oxidation site to allow reduction of the Fe–S cluster by the ubiquinol. The other site of the Fe–S cluster is close enough to the heme group of cytochrome c1 to allow oxidation of the Fe–S cluster by the cytochrome c1. Novel mechanisms for internal whereby large displacement of the Fe–S domain of Rieske protein shuttles electrons from ubiquinol to cytochrome c1, have been proposed (Zhang et al., 1998; Iwata et al., 1998).
Cytochrome c oxidase is a key enzyme in the respiratory chain. The enzyme catalyzes a reaction in which dioxygen reduction by protons and electrons from cytochrome is coupled to proton pumping across the mitochondrial or bacterial membrane. The enzyme drives protons about 50 Å across the membrane against an electrochemical gradient to accumulate protons on one side of the membrane. The X-ray structures of cytochrome c oxidase have been determined for the 13-subunit bovine heart oxidase (Tsukihara et al., 1995, 1996: Yoshikawa et al., 1998; Tomizaki et al., 1999) as well as for the four-subunit oxidase from the bacterium Paracoccus denitrificans (Iwata et al., 1995; Ostermeier et al., 1997). The structures of subunits I, II and III are very similar in both molecules. Locations of metal centres and a close-up structure of the dioxygen reduction site is presented in Fig. 10. An electron accepted at CuA is transferred to heme a through the hydrogen-bond network between propionic groups of heme a and CuA centre, and to heme a3 through a bridging peptide of His–Phe–His between hemes a and a3. Dioxygen is held between Fea3 and CuB, coordinated by three histidine residues. The 2.3 Å X-ray structures have revealed that His240 ligating to CuB is covalently bound to a Tyr244 (Yoshikawa et al., 1998). The covalent linkage presumably allows from the CuB to a dioxygen molecule in conjunction with protonation of the dioxygen molecule by a hydroxyl group of Tyr244 pointing to the dioxygen reduction site. A proton pumping mechanism, shown in Fig. 11, has been proposed by structural comparison between the oxidized and the reduced states of bovine enzyme (Yoshikawa et al., 1998). Before the X-ray structures appeared, another proton pumping mechanism was proposed involving a histidine cycle in which one of the imidazole ligands to CuB changes its conformation and protonation state, depending on the of the dioxygen reduction site (Wikstrom et al., 1994). The X-ray structure of the bacterial enzyme showed that one of the imidazole ligands lost electron density in the Fourier map at 2.8 Å resolution (Iwata et al., 1995). The histidine residue was assigned as the site of proton pumping (Iwata et al., 1995). Several pathways have been suggested as candidates for proton translocations (Iwata et al., 1995; Tsukihara et al., 1996). These structural studies should enable us to plan further spectroscopic and site-directed mutagenesis experiments.
4. Membrane proteins forming channels
Each biological membrane is equipped with various channels that aid in the selective transport of molecules or ions across the membrane. Porins in the outer membranes of gram-negative bacteria, mitochondria and chloroplast act as molecular sieves for hydrophilic molecules smaller than ∼600 Da. The X-ray structures of porin from Rhodobacter capsulatus (Weiss, Abele et al., 1991; Weiss, Kreusch et al., 1991; Weiss & Schulz, 1992), matrix porin (OmpF) from Escherichia coli (Cowan et al., 1992) and phosphoporin (PhoE) from E. coli (Cowan et al., 1992) have revealed 16- to 18-stranded antiparallel β-barrels, each forming a pore that facilitates the diffusion of small hydrophilic molecules. Fig. 12 is a ribbon drawing of R. capsulatus porin. The pore is constricted by an internal loop structure to prevent molecules larger than 600 Da from passing through the pore. Similar antiparallel β-barrels have been shown by X-ray analyses of maltoporin (LamB), a protein that facilitates the diffusion of maltodextrins across the outer membrane of the gram-negative bacterium Staphylococcus aureus (Schirmer et al., 1995), and a sucrose-specific porin (ScrY) from Salmonella typhimurium (Forst et al., 1998). Microbial toxins such as α-hemolysin (αHL) and aerolysin can form transmembrane channels that destroy cells by breaking their permeability barriers against ions, water and small molecules. Figs. 13(a) and 13(b) are the monomeric and heptameric structures of αHL, respectively (Song et al., 1996). A stem consisting of a 14-stranded antiparallel β-barrel forms a transmembrane channel. αHL and Aeromonas hydrophila aerolysin (Parker et al., 1994) are transmembrane pores with antiparallel β-barrels in an oligomeric state. The proteins are water-soluble in the monomeric form.
The structure of FhuA, the receptor for ferrichrome-iron in Escherichia coli outer membrane which mediates the of ferric siderophores across the outer membrane, was determined by the X-ray method (Ferguson et al., 1998). It is an antiparallel β-barrel channel consisting of 22 antiparallel β-strands, as shown in Fig. 14. A structurally distinct domain located in the barrel constricts to regulate a selective iron transport across the outer membrane.
Potassium ions diffuse rapidly across cell membranes through potassium channels. All of the potassium channels show a high selectivity toward K+ ≈ Rb+ > Cs+, while permeabilities for the smaller alkaline ions Na+ and Li+ are very low at around 0.01 to 0.02 of that of K+ (Hille, 1973). The potassium channel from Streptomyces lividans, an integral membrane protein, is a tetramer with a fourfold symmetry about a central pore, as shown in Fig. 15. Each subunit consists of a six-turn outer helix, a three-turn pore helix and an eight-turn inner helix (Doyle et al., 1998). A potassium ion which is identified in the pore is coordinated by eight carbonyl groups with rigid conformation. The ion is dehydrated when it enters the pore. The coordination geometry around the potassium ion of ionic radius 1.33 Å is designed so that dehydration energy is compensated by the interaction between the potassium ion and carbonyl groups, whereas the structure of the carbonyl groups cannot compensate for the dehydration energy for highly hydrated sodium ions with an ionic radius of 0.98 Å. Thus, the channel transfers potassium ions selectively. The X-ray of a gated mechanosensitive ions channel from Mycobacterium tuberculosis was reported following publication of the potassium channel (Chang et al., 1998). This channel is a homopentamer, with each subunit containing two transmembrane α-helices and a third cytoplasmic α-helix. A channel gate was identified at the cytoplasmic side of the pore.
5. Other integral membrane proteins
Prostaglandin H2 synthase-1 is the only integral monotopic membrane protein whose et al., 1994). Anchor helices are embedded in a shallow membrane. The helices are roughly parallel to the membrane surface with the hydrophobic residues facing the inside of the membrane and the rather hydrophilic residues situated at the surface region. Since the helices are not the most hydrophobic segments along the polypeptide chain, membrane segments expected from the amino acid sequence are incompatible with the crystal structure.
has been determined thus far (PicotThe X-ray structure of the N-terminal domain of the outer membrane protein A (OmpA) of E. coli showed that the domain forms an antiparallel β-barrel as in the case of the other outer membrane proteins (Pautsch & Schulz, 1998). The barrel consists of eight strands that appear to be constructed in the form of an with a hydrophilic cavity without forming a pore. The β-barrel anchors the C-terminal domain, consisting of residues 172 to 325, to the outer membrane. If a β-structure has to be used, as is probably the case with the outer membrane proteins, the slim eight-stranded β-barrel seems to be an efficient construction for an anchor (Pautsch & Schulz, 1998).
6. Concluding remarks
The membrane proteins of bioenergetic systems, including bacterial RCs, bacterial LH2, plant LHCII, bacteriorhodopsin, cytochrome bc1 and cytochrome c oxidase, fold in the form of α-helices in the transmembrane region. High-resolution structures of these membrane proteins have opened up a new era in molecular bioenergetics.
Each biological membrane has various kinds of membrane proteins functioning as channels. X-ray crystallography has elucidated two structural types of channels. One of them is the β-barrel channel, consisting of 14 to 22 antiparallel β-strands, exemplified by porin, OmpF, PhoE, LamB, ScrY and FhuA, while the other has a helical architecture, consisting of eight to ten transmembrane α-helices, represented by the potassium channel and the large-conductance mechanosensitive channel. The structures of the channels determined by the X-ray crystallographic method have given us invaluable insight into the mechanism of molecular transport through membranes.
There are many unknown structures that still remain to be determined, particularly membrane proteins that play key roles in important biological processes, such as energy conversion, molecular transport, signalling and so on. Despite the many difficulties that one still encounters in the production, purification and crystallization of proteins, the number of crystal structures of membrane proteins determined each year is gradually increasing. Development of synchrotron radiation techniques should enable X-ray analysis of poor crystals that diffract weakly or a small crystal with dimensions of 20–40 µm by 20–40 µm by 5 µm (Pebay-Peyroula et al., 1997). Synchrotron X-ray crystallography, coupled with developments in biochemical techniques, should facilitate structural studies of membrane proteins, leading to further progress in the understanding of biological processes.
Acknowledgements
This research was supported in part by a Grant-in-Aid for the `Research for the Future' program from the Japan Society for Promotion of Science (JSPS-RFTF96L00503 to TT). TT is a senior visiting scientist of RIKEN.
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