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Packing of apolar side chains enables accurate design of highly stable membrane proteins
Author(s) -
Marco Mravic,
Jessica L. Thomaston,
Maxwell R. Tucker,
Paige Solomon,
Lijun Liu,
William F. DeGrado
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 12.556
H-Index - 1186
eISSN - 1095-9203
pISSN - 0036-8075
DOI - 10.1126/science.aav7541
Subject(s) - side chain , membrane , steric effects , membrane protein , chemistry , folding (dsp implementation) , hydrogen bond , protein folding , protein design , phospholamban , protein structure , crystallography , biophysics , stereochemistry , biochemistry , molecule , biology , organic chemistry , phosphorylation , electrical engineering , engineering , polymer
The features that stabilize the structures of membrane proteins remain poorly understood. Polar interactions contribute modestly, and the hydrophobic effect contributes little to the energetics of apolar side-chain packing in membranes. Disruption of steric packing can destabilize the native folds of membrane proteins, but is packing alone sufficient to drive folding in lipids? If so, then membrane proteins stabilized by this feature should be readily designed and structurally characterized-yet this has not been achieved. Through simulation of the natural protein phospholamban and redesign of variants, we define a steric packing code underlying its assembly. Synthetic membrane proteins designed using this code and stabilized entirely by apolar side chains conform to the intended fold. Although highly stable, the steric complementarity required for their folding is surprisingly stringent. Structural informatics shows that the designed packing motif recurs across the proteome, emphasizing a prominent role for precise apolar packing in membrane protein folding, stabilization, and evolution.

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