posted on 2007-07-04, 00:00authored byHeedeok Hong, Sangho Park, Ricardo H. Flores Jiménez, Dennis Rinehart, Lukas K. Tamm
Aromatic residues are frequently found in helical and β-barrel integral membrane proteins enriched
at the membrane−water interface. Although the importance of these residues in membrane protein folding
has been rationalized by thermodynamic partition measurements using peptide model systems, their
contribution to the stability of bona fide membrane proteins has never been demonstrated. Here, we have
investigated the contribution of interfacial aromatic residues to the thermodynamic stability of the β-barrel
outer membrane protein OmpA from Escherichia coli in lipid bilayers by performing extensive mutagenesis
and equilibrium folding experiments. Isolated interfacial tryptophanes contribute −2.0 kcal/mol, isolated
interfacial tyrosines contribute −2.6 kcal/mol, and isolated interfacial phenylalanines contribute −1.0 kcal/mol to the stability of this protein. These values agree well with the prediction from the Wimley−White
interfacial hydrophobicity scale, except for tyrosine residues, which contribute more than has been expected
from the peptide models. Double mutant cycle analysis reveals that interactions between aromatic side
chains become significant when their centroids are separated by less than 6 Å but are nearly insignificant
above 7 Å. Aromatic−aromatic side chain interactions are on the order of −1.0 to −1.4 kcal/mol and do
not appear to depend on the type of aromatic residue. These results suggest that the clustering of aromatic
side chains at membrane interfaces provides an additional heretofore not yet recognized driving force for
the folding and stability of integral membrane proteins.