The Signal Recognition Particle-targeting Pathway Does Not Necessarily Deliver Proteins to the Sec-translocase inEscherichia coli — Susana Cristóbal (1999) | RDL Network
The Signal Recognition Particle-targeting Pathway Does Not Necessarily Deliver Proteins to the Sec-translocase inEscherichia coli
Journal of Biological Chemistry 274(29): 20068-20070
Article 1999 English
Authors
SC
Susana Cristóbal
PS
Pier A. Scotti
JL
Joen Luirink
Abstract
1 min read
ProW is an Escherichia coli inner membrane protein that consists of a 100-residue-long periplasmic N-terminal tail (N-tail) followed by seven closely spaced transmembrane segments. N-tail translocation presumably proceeds in a C-to-N-terminal direction and represents a poorly understood aspect of membrane protein biogenesis. Here, using an in vivo depletion approach, we show that N-tail translocation in a ProW derivative comprising the N-tail and the first transmembrane segment fused to the globular P2 domain of leader peptidase depends both on the bacterial signal recognition particle (SRP) and the Sec-translocase. Surprisingly, however, a deletion construct with only one transmembrane segment downstream of the N-tail can assemble properly even under severe depletion of SecE, a central component of the Sec-translocase, but not under SRP-depletion conditions. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration that the SRP-targeting pathway does not necessarily deliver SRP-dependent inner membrane proteins to the Sec-translocase. The data further suggest that N-tail translocation can proceed in the absence of a functional Sec-translocase.
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