Structural analysis of synthetic peptide fragments from EmrE, a multidrug resistance protein, in a membrane-mimetic environment

Venkatraman, Janani ; Gowda, G. A. Nagana ; Balaram, Padmanabhan (2002) Structural analysis of synthetic peptide fragments from EmrE, a multidrug resistance protein, in a membrane-mimetic environment Biochemistry, 41 (21). pp. 6631-6639. ISSN 0006-2960

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Official URL: http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/bi015793w

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi015793w

Abstract

EmrE, a multidrug resistance protein from Escherichia coli, renders the bacterium resistant to a variety of cytotoxic drugs by active translocation out of the cell. The 110-residue sequence of EmrE limits the number of structural possibilities that can be envisioned for this membrane protein. Four helix bundle models have been considered [Yerushalmi, H., Lebendiker, M., and Schuldiner, S. (1996) J. Biol. Chem. 271, 31044-31048]. The validity of EmrE structural models has been probed experimentally by investigations on overlapping peptides (ranging in length from 19 to 27 residues), derived from the sequence of EmrE. The choice of peptides was made to provide sequences of two complete, predicted transmembrane helices (peptides H1 and H3) and two helix-loop-helix motifs (peptides A and B). Peptide (B) also corresponds to a putative hairpin in a speculative β-barrel model, with the "Pro-Thr-Gly" segment forming a turn. Structure determination in SDS micelles using NMR indicates peptide H1 to be predominantly helical, with helix boundaries in the micellar environment corroborating predicted helical limits. Peptide A adopts a helix-loop-helix structure in SDS micelles, and peptide B was also largely helical in micellar environments. An analogue peptide, C, in which the central "Pro-Thr-Gly" was replaced by "DPro-Gly" displays local turn conformation at the DPro-Gly segment, but neither a continuous helical stretch nor β-hairpin formation was observed. This study implies that the constraints of membrane and micellar environments largely direct the structure of transmembrane peptides and proteins and study of judiciously selected peptide fragments can prove useful in the structural elucidation of membrane proteins.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to American Chemical Society.
ID Code:4750
Deposited On:18 Oct 2010 06:51
Last Modified:11 May 2012 11:09

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