Types of protein in cell membrane

 

The collection of proteins within a cell determines its health and function. Proteins are responsible for nearly every task of cellular life, including cell shape and inner organization, product manufacture and waste cleanup, and routine maintenance. Proteins also receive signals from outside the cell and mobilize intracellular response. They are the workhorse macromolecules of the cell and are as diverse as the functions they serve.

How Diverse Are Proteins?

Proteins can be big or small, mostly hydrophilic or mostly hydrophobic, exist alone or as part of a multi-unit structure, and change shape frequently or remain virtually immobile. All of these differences arise from the unique amino acid sequences that make up proteins. Fully folded proteins also have distinct surface characteristics that determine which other molecules they interact with. When proteins bind with other molecules, their conformation can change in subtle or dramatic ways.

Not surprisingly, protein functions are as diverse as protein structures. For example, structural proteins maintain cell shape, akin to a skeleton, and they compose structural elements in connective tissues like cartilage and bone in vertebrates. Enzymes are another type of protein, and these molecules catalyze the biochemical reactions that occur in cells. Yet other proteins work as monitors, changing their shape and activity in response to metabolic signals or messages from outside the cell. Cells also secrete various proteins that become part of the extracellular matrix or are involved in intercellular communication.

Proteins are sometimes altered after translation and folding are complete. In such cases, so-called transferase enzymes add small modifier groups, such as phosphates or carboxyl groups, to the protein. These modifications often shift protein conformation and act as molecular switches that turn the activity of a protein on or off. Many post-translational modifications are reversible, although different enzymes catalyze the reverse reactions. For example, enzymes called kinases add phosphate groups to proteins, but enzymes called phosphatases are required to remove these phosphate groups (Figure 1).

How Do Proteins Provide Structural Support for Cells?

How Do Proteins Aid the Biochemical Reactions of a Cell?

Cells rely on thousands of different enzymes to catalyze metabolic reactions. Enzymes are proteins, and they make a biochemical reaction more likely to proceed by lowering the activation energy of the reaction, thereby making these reactions proceed thousands or even millions of times faster than they would without a catalyst. Enzymes are highly specific to their substrates. They bind these substrates at complementary areas on their surfaces, providing a snug fit that many scientists compare to a lock and key. Enzymes work by binding one or more substrates, bringing them together so that a reaction can take place, and releasing them once the reaction is complete. In particular, when substrate binding occurs, enzymes undergo a conformational shift that orients or strains the substrates so that they are more reactive (Figure 3).

The name of an enzyme usually refers to the type of biochemical reaction it catalyzes. For example, proteases break down proteins, and dehydrogenases oxidize a substrate by removing hydrogen atoms. As a general rule, the "-ase" suffix identifies a protein as an enzyme, whereas the first part of an enzyme's name refers to the reaction that it catalyzes.

What Do Proteins Do in the Plasma Membrane?

The proteins in the plasma membrane typically help the cell interact with its environment. For example, plasma membrane proteins carry out functions as diverse as ferrying nutrients across the plasma membrane, receiving chemical signals from outside the cell, translating chemical signals into intracellular action, and sometimes anchoring the cell in a particular location (Figure 4).

The overall surfaces of membrane proteins are mosaics, with patches of hydrophobic amino acids where the proteins contact lipids in the membrane bilayer and patches of hydrophilic amino acids on the surfaces that extend into the water-based cytoplasm. Many proteins can move within the plasma membrane through a process called membrane diffusion. This concept of membrane-bound proteins that can travel within the membrane is called the fluid-mosaic model of the cell membrane. The portions of membrane proteins that extend beyond the lipid bilayer into the extracellular environment are also hydrophilic and are frequently modified by the addition of sugar molecules. Other proteins are associated with the membrane but not inserted into it. They are sometimes anchored to lipids in the membrane or bound to other membrane proteins (Figure 5).

Conclusion

Proteins serve a variety of functions within cells. Some are involved in structural support and movement, others in enzymatic activity, and still others in interaction with the outside world. Indeed, the functions of individual proteins are as varied as their unique amino acid sequences and complex three-dimensional physical structures.

Types of protein in cell membrane

Understanding:

•  Membrane proteins are diverse in terms of structure, position in the membrane and function

    
Phospholipid bilayers are embedded with proteins, which may be either permanently or temporarily attached to the membrane

  • Integral proteins are permanently attached to the membrane and are typically transmembrane (they span across the bilayer)
  • Peripheral proteins are temporarily attached by non-covalent interactions and associate with one surface of the membrane  
Types of protein in cell membrane

Structure of Membrane Proteins

The amino acids of a membrane protein are localised according to polarity:

  • Non-polar (hydrophobic) amino acids associate directly with the lipid bilayer 
  • Polar (hydrophilic) amino acids are located internally and face aqueous solutions

Transmembrane proteins typically adopt one of two tertiary structures: 

  • Single helices / helical bundles 
  • Beta barrels (common in channel proteins)

Membrane Protein Structures

Types of protein in cell membrane

Types of protein in cell membrane

Functions of Membrane Proteins

Membrane proteins can serve a variety of key functions:

  • Junctions – Serve to connect and join two cells together 
  • Enzymes – Fixing to membranes localises metabolic pathways 
  • Transport – Responsible for facilitated diffusion and active transport 
  • Recognition – May function as markers for cellular identification 
  • Anchorage – Attachment points for cytoskeleton and extracellular matrix 
  • Transduction – Function as receptors for peptide hormones 


Mnemonic:  Jet Rat


Membrane Protein Functions

Types of protein in cell membrane