M&R Session 1 (Lecture 1.2) Flashcards
What are the permitted modes of motion of membrane proteins?
1) Conformational change
2) Rotational
3) Lateral
What are the restraints on protein mobility?
1) Lipid mediated effects - proteins will generally aggregate to cholesterol poor regions
2) Membrane protein associations
3) Association with extra-membranous proteins e.g. cytoskeleton
What are the two types of protein present in membranes?
Peripheral (surface) and Integral (deeply embedded)
How is a peripheral membrane protein attached to the membrane, and what can be used to wash these proteins away?
Electrostatic and hydrogen bond interactions. Washed away by changes in pH or using a salt solution (changes in H+ and ionic strength)
How is an integral membrane protein attached to the membrane, and what can be used to wash these proteins away?
Interact extensively with hydrophobic regions of bilayer. Require agents e.g. detergents/organic solvents that compete for non-polar interactions is bilayer.
What types of AA are present in the lipid region of the bilayer?
Small, hydrophobic and some polar, uncharged e.g. glycine, isoleucine and tyrosine
What is the structure of a TM domain?
Alpha helical (3.6aa per turn).
Why is asymmetry important for proteins?
Function e.g. correct orientation of Insulin-R is needed for the cell to respond to insulin i.e. ligand binding hydrophilic region is extracellular and not facing internally.
How is an erythrocyte ghost membrane formed?
Osmotic haemolysis releasing cytoplasmic components
Which molecular technique is used to analyse ghost membranes and what is revealed?
SDS-PAGE
Over 10 major proteins (bands) with major ones being numbered (heaviest to lightest).
If most of the proteins in the erythrocyte membrane are washed away with salt/changes in pH and are susceptible to proteolysis when the cytoplasmic face is exposed, what can be said about these proteins and their location?
Most are peripheral proteins located on the cytoplasmic side of the membrane.
Protein bands 3 and 7 are washed away with detergents. What does this indicate?
They are deeply embedded, integral proteins.
The erythrocyte cytoskeleton is a network composed of which two proteins?
Spectrin and Actin
Describe the structure of Spectrin and how it is formed.
Long, floppy, rod like molecule. Alpha and Beta subunits wind together to form an antiparallel heterodimer. 2 heterodimers associate head-to-head to form a heterotetramer of A2B2.
What does actin do in the RBC cytoskeleton? What else is present in these ‘crosslinks’?
Crosslinks spectrin molecules along with band 4.1 and adducin.