Integral membrane protein

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Integral membrane protein of the transmembrane type

An Integral Membrane Protein (IMP) is a protein molecule (or assembly of proteins) that in most cases spans the biological membrane with which it is associated (especially the plasma membrane) or which, in any case, is sufficiently embedded in the membrane to remain with it during the initial steps of biochemical purification (compare peripheral membrane protein).

Cells assemble IMPs in the endoplasmic reticulum. A short signal sequence at the N-terminus typically marks a protein as destined for installation in the membrane.

IMPs rarely diffuse freely within the membrane but rather most are anchored to the cytoskeleton.

IMPs comprise a very significant fraction of the proteins encoded in the genome.

Contents

Structure

There are many types of IMPs with wildly different structures. Although the structures of thousands of proteins have become known by X-ray diffraction and Nuclear magnetic resonance, the structures of only a few dozens of integral membrane proteins are known at atomic resolution, because they tend to denature on removal from the membrane, under which condition they are impossible to analyze.

In general, IMPs can be divided into three groups:

  1. Transmembrane
  2. Membrance-associated
  3. Lipid-linked

Transmembrane

A transmembrane IMP is an integral membrane protein that spans from the internal to the external surface of the biological membrane or lipid bilayer in which it is embedded. This is the most common type of IMP.

A hydrophobic domain of the protein resides in the oily core of the membrane, while hydrophilic domains protrude into the watery environment inside and outside the cell or compartment. Transmembrane proteins often have their N-terminal on the exoplasmic face and their C-terminal on the cytoplasmic face. Many transmembrane proteins have multiple membrane spanning alpha helix segments which anchors them to the membrane. Most transmembrane proteins have an internal topogenic sequence.

There are two basic types of transmembrane proteins:

  1. Single-pass
  2. Multi-pass transmembrane proteins have that multiple topogenic sequences.

Membrane-associated

A membrane-associated IMP is located entirely in the cytosol, and is attached to the cytosolic layer of the membrane with an amphipathic α helix.

Lipid-linked

Lipid-Linked IMPs are located entirely outside the bilayer, on either inside or outside of the cell, and are connected to the bilayer with one or more covalently attached lipid groups.

Function

Most commonly the function of IMPS is to act as a transporter for various molecules that would otherwise not be able to move across the cell membrane. When used as a transporter, its most common configuration is to have an extra-cellular domain and a cytoplasmic domain separated by a non-polar region that holds it tightly in the cell membrane.

Examples of the other functions that integral membrane proteins serve include the identification of the cell for recognition by other cells, the anchoring of one cell to another or to surrounding media, and the initiation of intracellular responses to external molecules. IMPs can be receptors, channels or enzymes.

Types

Following is a list of types of integral membrane proteins:

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