Membrane Proteins Overview - Gatekeepers & Signalers
- Proteins associated with the lipid bilayer; crucial for cell function.
- Roles: Act as channels, transporters (gatekeepers), receptors (signalers), enzymes, and cell adhesion molecules.
- Mediate interaction between cell and its environment.
- Structurally diverse, reflecting their varied functions.
- Essential for maintaining cellular homeostasis and communication.
⭐ Membrane proteins constitute about 50% of the mass of most plasma membranes, highlighting their functional importance (e.g., RBC membrane proteins like Spectrin, Ankyrin, Band 3, Glycophorin).
Integral Membrane Proteins - Deep Divers
- Embedded within or span lipid bilayer; hydrophobic regions ($\alpha$-helices, $\beta$-barrels) interact with lipid tails.
- Require strong detergents (e.g., SDS, Triton X-100) or organic solvents for extraction, disrupting membrane integrity.
- Major Types:
- Transmembrane Proteins: Span the entire membrane.
- Single-pass: Cross membrane once (e.g., Glycophorin A in RBCs, LDL receptor).
- Multi-pass: Cross membrane multiple times (e.g., GPCRs - 7 helices, Band 3 protein, Rhodopsin, ion channels).
- Partially Embedded Proteins: Do not span bilayer; anchored within one leaflet.
- Transmembrane Proteins: Span the entire membrane.
- Key Functions: Act as channels (e.g., Na+/K+ ATPase), transporters (e.g., GLUTs), receptors (e.g., insulin receptor, GPCRs), enzymes, and cell adhesion molecules.
⭐ G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) are the most extensive family of integral membrane proteins, characterized by 7 transmembrane $\alpha$-helices, and are the target for approximately 30-50% of all pharmaceutical drugs.
Peripheral Membrane Proteins - Surface Associates
- Bind to membrane surfaces or integral proteins via non-covalent interactions.
- Primarily electrostatic forces and hydrogen bonds.
- Do not span the hydrophobic core of the lipid bilayer.
- Solubilization:
- Easily dissociated by mild treatments.
- Examples: High ionic strength solutions (e.g., $ \textbf{1 M} \text{ NaCl} $), changes in pH, or addition of chelating agents like EDTA.
- Detergents are not required for their removal.
- Key Functions & Examples:
- Cytoskeletal components: Spectrin, Ankyrin (RBC membrane integrity).
- Electron carriers: Cytochrome c (mitochondrial inner membrane).
- Enzymes: Phospholipase A2.
- Signal transduction proteins.

⭐ Defects in Spectrin or Ankyrin, key peripheral proteins, can lead to hereditary spherocytosis, causing fragile, sphere-shaped red blood cells and anemia.
IMP vs PMP Showdown - Key Distinctions
| Feature | Integral (IMP) | Peripheral (PMP) |
|---|---|---|
| Association | Tightly bound; embedded within or spanning bilayer. | Loosely bound to membrane surface or other proteins. |
| Extraction | Requires disruption of bilayer (detergents, solvents). | Mild conditions (high salt, pH change, urea, chelators). |
| Nature | Amphipathic: hydrophobic domains in membrane. | Generally hydrophilic; interacts via non-covalent bonds. |
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Integral proteins: Embedded in bilayer; need detergents for extraction (e.g., Glycophorin, Band 3).
- Peripheral proteins: Loosely bound to surface; extracted by salt/pH changes (e.g., Spectrin, Ankyrin).
- Transmembrane domains: Often α-helices (GPCRs) or β-barrels (Porins).
- RBC cytoskeleton: Spectrin-Ankyrin (peripheral) crucial for cell shape and integrity.
- Lipid-anchored proteins: Covalently linked to lipids, anchoring them to the membrane.
- Fluid Mosaic Model: Proteins exhibit lateral mobility in a fluid lipid sea.
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