| Literature DB >> 28865427 |
Qiu-Ping Li1, Shuai Wang1, Jin-Ying Gou2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Membrane proteins define biological functions of membranes in cells. Extracellular peptides of transmembrane proteins receive signals from pathogens or environments, and are the major targets of drug developments. Despite of their essential roles, membrane proteins remain elusive in topological studies due to technique difficulties in their expressions and purifications.Entities:
Keywords: Cytoplasmic terminus; Extracellular terminus; Membrane protein; Released peptide; Split ubiquitin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28865427 PMCID: PMC5581432 DOI: 10.1186/s12896-017-0391-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biotechnol ISSN: 1472-6750 Impact factor: 2.563
Summary of computational annotations and reported topologies of known membrane and soluble proteins
| WKS1 | VKOR | PIP1;2 | HPN | GPR3 | GUS | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gene ID | KT834954.1 | NM_119742.4 | NM_130159 | X07732.1 | NM_005281 | AJ298139.1 | ||||||
| N | C | N | C | N | C | N | C | N | C | N | C | |
| TMHMM | no TMHs |
|
| in | in | in | out | out | in | no TMHs | ||
| SOSUI | no TMHs | No results | No results | in | out | No results | no TMHs | |||||
| TOPCONS | no TMHs |
| out | in | in |
| out | in | no TMHs | |||
| PHILIUS | no TMHs |
| out | in | in |
|
| in | no TMHs | |||
| HMMTOP | no TMHs |
| out | in | in | in | out | out | in | no TMHs | ||
| TMPRED | no TMHs | out |
| in | in |
| out |
|
|
|
| |
| POLYPHOBIUS | no TMHs |
| out |
| in | in | out | out | in | no TMHs | ||
| HMM–TM | in |
|
| out |
| in | in | out | out |
| no TMHs | |
| OCTOPUS | no TMHs |
| out | in | in |
| out |
| no TMHs | |||
| SUT | in | in | out | out | in | in | in | out | out | in | Soluble | |
| Reference | out | out | in | in | in | out | out | in | Soluble | |||
N, N terminus. C, C terminus. Italic, different from experimental results. Computational predictions were done in versions of December 2016
Prediction of yeast growth on SD/−L-W/−H/−A medium in SUT system with different types of proteins
| Type | Terminus | NubG | NubWT |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nucleo-cytoplasmic protein | TA-Target | Yesa | Yes |
| Target-TA | Yesa | Yes | |
| N terminal truncated membrane protein | TA-Target | Yesa | Yes |
| Target-TA | No | Yesc/Noe | |
| Membrane protein without truncation | TA-Target | No | Yesc/Noe |
| Target-TA | No | Yesc/Noe |
Note. a autoactivation, c cytoplasmic termini, e extracellular termini
Fig. 1Subcellular localization and yeast growth of a typical nucleocytoplasmic protein. a-b Confocal micrographs of GUS-GFP (a) or GFP-GUS (b) fusion proteins in tabaco epidermal cells. The panels from left to right stand for: GFP (green), chloroplast auto-fluorescence (red), cell shape under bright light and overlay of the three panels. Bar stands for 25 μm. GFP, green; chloroplast autofluorescence, red (Chl); cell shape, bright light; and overlay of the three panels. c Yeast growth of GUS in SUT system. M, plasma membrane; Cyt, cytoplasm; Cub, C terminal ubiquitin; NubWT, wild type N terminal ubiquitin; NubG, low affinity N terminal ubiquitin with Ile13Gly mutation
Fig. 2Performance of SUT on four typical membrane proteins with different topologies. a-d Yeast growth of PIP (a), GPR3 (b), HPN (c), and VKOR (d) in the SUT system
Fig. 3Subcellular localization and performance of SUT on a membrane protein with N terminal released peptide. a-b Confocal micrographs of WKS1.1-GFP (a) or GFP-WKS1.1 (b) fusion proteins in tabaco epidermal cells. Bar stands for 25 μm. Green: GFP fusion proteins; red: chloroplast autofluorescence; bright light: cell shape; and overlay of the three panels. c Detection of WKS1.1-GFP or GFP-WKS1.1 fusion proteins with anti GFP antibody. N, GFP-WKS1.1; C, WKS1.1-GFP; GFP, empty vector. Duplicate experiments were shown with N and C samples. d Growth of yeast cells with WKS1.1 and control plasmids in SUT system. e Growth of yeast cells with WKS1.1 in the SUT system