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Statistical analysis of predicted transmembrane alpha-helices
Authors:IT Arkin  AT Brunger
Affiliation:Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520, USA.
Abstract:Statistical analyses were undertaken for putative transmembrane alpha-helices obtained from a database representing the subset of membrane proteins available in Swiss-Prot. The average length of a transmembrane alpha-helix was found to be 22-21 amino acids with a large variation around the mean. The transfer free energy from water to oil of a transmembrane alpha-helix in bitopic proteins, -48 kcal/mol, is higher than that in polytopic proteins, -39 kcal/mol, and is nearly identical to that obtained by assuming a random distribution of solely hydrophobic amino acids in the alpha-helix. The amino acid composition of hydrophobic residues is similar in bitopic and polytopic proteins. In contrast, the more polar the amino acids are, the less likely they are to be found in bitopic proteins compared to polytopic ones. This most likely reflects the ability of alpha-helical bundles to shield the polarity of residues from the hydrophobic bilayer. One half of all amino acids were distributed nonrandomly in both bitopic and polytopic proteins. A preference was found for tyrosine and tryptophan residues to be at the ends of transmembrane alpha-helices. Correlated distribution analysis of amino acid pairs indicated that most amino acids are independently distributed in each helix. Exceptions are cysteine, tyrosine, and tryptophan which appear to cluster closely to one another and glycines which are preferentially found on the same side of alpha-helices.
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