ISCB-Asia/SCCG 2012 Keynote Address |
Photo Max Brouwers |
The goal of our own work is to provide quantitative data on the energetics and kinetics of membrane protein assembly in vivo to serve as a basis both for a deeper understanding of the mechanism of membrane protein assembly, and to help improve topology- and structure-prediction methods.
The most important achievements include the discovery and experimental validation of the so-called “(-1,-3)-rule” (describes signal peptide cleavage sites; EJB 133:17, JMB 184:99) and the “positive inside” rule (describes membrane protein topology; EMBO J 5:3021, Nature 341:456, Cell 62:1135, Cell 77:401), the development of widely used prediction methods (e.g., TopPred, SignalP, TargetP, TMHMM; JMB 225:487, Prot.Engineer. 10:1, JMB 300:1005, JMB 305:567, JMB 327:735, JMB 340:783, PNAS 105:7177), the first proteome-wide theoretical and experimental studies of membrane protein topology in E. coli and S. cerevisiae (Protein Sci. 7:1029, Science 308:1321, JMB 35:489, PNAS 103:11142), the first quantitative analysis of the energetics of membrane protein assembly in vivo (Nature 433:377, Science 307:1427, Nature 450:1026, PNAS 106:11588), and recent theoretical and experimental studies of so-called dual-topology membrane proteins and their role in the evolution of membrane protein structure (Nature Struct.Mol.Biol. 13:112, Science 315:1282, Science 328:1698).
Altogether, the cumulated work has been cited ~46,000 times, h-index = 85 (Web of Science). Listed in the ISI Highly Cited database.
Prof. Heijne has recieved numerous awards, including the 2012 ISCB Senior Scientist Award.