Abstract

Of the membrane proteins of known structure, we found that a remarkable 67% of the water soluble domains are structurally similar to water soluble proteins of known structure. Moreover, 41% of known water soluble protein structures share a domain with an already known membrane protein structure. We also found that functional residues are frequently conserved between extramembrane domains of membrane and soluble proteins that share structural similarity. These results suggest membrane and soluble proteins readily exchange domains and their attendant functionalities. The exchanges between membrane and soluble proteins are particularly frequent in eukaryotes, indicating that this is an important mechanism for increasing functional complexity. The high level of structural overlap between the two classes of proteins provides an opportunity to employ the extensive information on soluble proteins to illuminate membrane protein structure and function, for which much less is known. To this end, we employed structure guided sequence alignment to elucidate the functions of membrane proteins in the human genome. Our results bridge the gap of fold space between membrane and water soluble proteins and provide a resource for the prediction of membrane protein function. A database of predicted structural and functional relationships for proteins in the human genome is provided at sbi.postech.ac.kr/emdmp.

Highlights

  • The structural space of soluble proteins has been extensively explored

  • We find that over 60% of the extramembrane domains were structurally related to proteins of known structure

  • The exchanges between membrane and soluble proteins are frequent in eukaryotes, indicating that this is an important mechanism for increasing functional complexity

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Summary

Introduction

The structural space of soluble proteins has been extensively explored. Most single-domain soluble proteins appear to have at least one structural homolog in the current PDB database [1,2]. The exploration of membrane protein fold space lags far behind [3,4,5]. Membrane proteins reside in a hydrophobic lipid-bilayer, but their extra-membrane regions are exposed to same folding environment as soluble proteins [5]. Fold space of membrane proteins may be connected with soluble proteins through the extra-membrane portions. We examined how much overlap exists between the structure spaces of soluble proteins and membrane proteins. If there is extensive domain sharing, it may be possible to use the vast data on soluble proteins to provide information on their membrane protein relatives

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