The only thing mentioned in my text book about transmembrane helices is that the hydrophobic amino acids are located on the outside.
The question was :
"Explain where the positive and negative amino acids are located (inside or outside) in a transmembrane helix. Your answer has to be based on the characteristics of the structure of membranes and the structure of an α-helix. "
Positive and negative amino acids are charged, so they are hydrophilic? So, both of these kind amino acids should be on the inside of the transmembrane helix, but apparently one has to be on the inside and the other should be on the outside, so that's something I don't understand, because something that's hydrophilic can't react with something that's hydrophobic, no?
The membrane is defined as a bilayer of hydrophillic heads and hydrophobic tails. So the environment of the transmembrane protein is hydrophobic?
And to answer the question about what amino acid sequence is needed to form an alpha helix, I'm not sure what you mean. The carbonyl group of the peptide bound forms a hydrogen bond with the amino group of a amino acid that is located 4 places further. This is how an alpha helix is formed?
The only thing I can think of is this (what I already said) :
phospholipids with a negative charge are located in the intracellular side of the membrane. The phospholipids with a positive charge are on the extracellular side of the membrane.
So, positive amino acids will be needed on the outside of the transmembrane protein to insure a stable conformation?
I hope it's clear for you. It's very hard to express myself in a language that isn't my native language.