Crystal structure of the annexin XII hexamer and implications for bilayer insertion
- PMID: 7477411
- DOI: 10.1038/378512a0
Crystal structure of the annexin XII hexamer and implications for bilayer insertion
Abstract
Annexins are a family of calcium- and phospholipid-binding proteins implicated in a number of biological processes including membrane fusion and ion channel formation. The crystal structure of the annexin XII hexamer, refined at 2.8 A resolution, forms a concave disk with 3-2 symmetry, about 100 A in diameter and 70 A thick with a central hydrophilic pore. Six intermolecular Ca2+ ions are involved in hexamer formation. An additional 18 Ca2+ ions are located on the perimeter of the disk, accessible only from the side of the hexameric disk. On the basis of the hexamer structure we propose here a new mode of protein-phospholipid bilayer interaction that is distinct from the hydrophobic insertion of typical membrane proteins. This speculative model postulates the Ca(2+)-dependent insertion of the hydrophilic annexin XII hexamer into phospholipid bilayers with local reorientation of the bilayer phospholipids.
Comment in
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Ion channels. Annexins taken to task.Nature. 1995 Nov 30;378(6556):446-7. doi: 10.1038/378446a0. Nature. 1995. PMID: 7477399 No abstract available.