Abstract

Membrane proteins function in the diverse environment of the lipid bilayer. Experimental evidence suggests that some lipid molecules bind tightly to specific sites on the membrane protein surface. These lipid molecules often act as co-factors and play important functional roles. In this study, we have assessed the evolutionary selection pressure experienced at lipid-binding sites in a set of α-helical and β-barrel membrane proteins using posterior probability analysis of the ratio of synonymous vs. nonsynonymous substitutions (ω-ratio). We have also carried out a geometric analysis of the membrane protein structures to identify residues in close contact with co-crystallized lipids. We found that residues forming cholesterol-binding sites in both β2-adrenergic receptor and Na+–K+-ATPase exhibit strong conservation, which can be characterized by an expanded cholesterol consensus motif for GPCRs. Our results suggest the functional importance of aromatic stacking interactions and interhelical hydrogen bonds in facilitating protein–cholesterol interactions, which is now reflected in the expanded motif. We also find that residues forming the cardiolipin-binding site in formate dehydrogenase-N γ-subunit and the phosphatidylglycerol binding site in KcsA are under strong purifying selection pressure. Although the lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-binding site in ferric hydroxamate uptake receptor (FhuA) is only weakly conserved, we show using a statistical mechanical model that LPS binds to the least stable FhuA β-strand and protects it from the bulk lipid. Our results suggest that specific lipid binding may be a general mechanism employed by β-barrel membrane proteins to stabilize weakly stable regions. Overall, we find that the residues forming specific lipid binding sites on the surfaces of membrane proteins often experience strong purifying selection pressure.

Highlights

  • Biological membranes are an indispensable component of the living cells

  • Our analysis shows that residues interacting with cocrystallized lipids often experience stronger purifying selection pressure than residues forming the rest of the membrane-facing protein surface, indicating the importance of lipid binding sites on membrane proteins

  • Membrane proteins in the dataset contain a variety of lipids, including cholesterol, lipopolysaccharide (FhuA ferric hydroxamate uptake receptor), cardiolipin, phosphatidylglycerol modeled as diacyl glycerol (KcsA K+ channel), as well as detergent molecules in rhomboid intramembrane protease

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Summary

Introduction

Biological membranes are an indispensable component of the living cells. They create intercellular and intracellular permeability barriers and incorporate proteins that play important roles in cell communications, protein and solute transport, photosynthesis, motility, and many other vital physiological functions. Current models emphasize a membrane with variable patchiness and thickness and a higher content of integrated membrane proteins [2]. A multitude of experimental results shifted a general perception of phospholipids as membrane building blocks that provide an appropriate environment for integral membrane proteins, to molecules that play important regulatory roles in modulating membrane protein function, such as directing membrane protein topology, folding, and assembly [3,4,5,6,7]

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