Abstract

Studying folding and assembly of naturally occurring α-helical transmembrane proteins can inspire the design of membrane proteins with defined functions. Thus far, most studies have focused on the role of membrane-integrated protein regions. However, to fully understand folding pathways and stabilization of α–helical membrane proteins, it is vital to also include the role of soluble loops. We have analyzed the impact of interhelical loops on folding, assembly and stability of the heme-containing four-helix bundle transmembrane protein cytochrome b6 that is involved in charge transfer across biomembranes. Cytochrome b6 consists of two transmembrane helical hairpins that sandwich two heme molecules. Our analyses strongly suggest that the loop connecting the helical hairpins is not crucial for positioning the two protein “halves” for proper folding and assembly of the holo-protein. Furthermore, proteolytic removal of any of the remaining two loops, which connect the two transmembrane helices of a hairpin structure, appears to also not crucially effect folding and assembly. Overall, the transmembrane four-helix bundle appears to be mainly stabilized via interhelical interactions in the transmembrane regions, while the soluble loop regions guide assembly and stabilize the holo-protein. The results of this study might steer future strategies aiming at designing heme-binding four-helix bundle structures, involved in transmembrane charge transfer reactions.

Highlights

  • Cyt. b6 has four TM α-helices that are connected by loops, and two heme molecules are noncovalently bound via four histidine residues (Fig 1A) [25, 58]

  • Cytochrome b6 assembly we initially anticipated that the loop region connecting the helical hairpins AB and CD might be vital for formation of a heme-accepting structure

  • Interhelical loops are not vital for assembly of the TM cyt. b6, and the four-helix bundle is mainly stabilized by interhelical interactions in the TM region

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Summary

Introduction

Popot and D.M. Engelman proposed a simple model, describing the folding pathway of membrane proteins [1, 2], and this model has served many times as a valuable concept guiding the design of artificial transmembrane (TM) proteins. Based on the two-stage model, stable TM α-helices initially integrate independently into a membrane (stage one), and subsequently sequence specific interactions between TM helices result in formation of a fully and functionally folded protein (stage two).

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