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1.
The distal part of the long tail fibers of the Escherichia coli phage T4 consists of a dimer of protein 37. A fragment of the corresponding gene, encoding 253 amino acids, was inserted into several different sites within the cloned gene for the 325-residue outer membrane protein OmpA. In plasmid pTU T4-5 the fragment was inserted once and in pTU T4-10 tandemly twice between the codons for residues 153 and 154 of the OmpA protein. In pTU T4-22 two fragments were present, in tandem, between the codons for residues 45 and 46 of this protein. In pIN T4-6 one fragment was inserted into the ompA gene immediately following the part encoding the signal sequence. The corresponding mature proteins consist, in this order, of 605, 860, 835, and 279 amino acid residues. All precursor proteins were processed and translocated across the plasma membrane. Hence, not only can the OmpA protein serve as a vehicle for export of a nonsecretory protein, but the signal sequence alone can also mediate export of such a protein. Export of the pro-OmpA protein depends on the SecA protein. Export of the tail fiber fragment expressed from pIN T4-6 remained SecA dependent. Thus, the secA pathway in this case is chosen by the signal peptide. It is proposed that a signal peptide can mediate translocation of nonsecretory proteins as long as they are export-compatible. The inability of a signal sequence to mediate export of some proteins appears to be due to export incompatibility of the protein rather than to the absence of information, within the mature part of the polypeptide, which would be required for translocation.  相似文献   

2.
R Freudl  H Schwarz  M Klose  N R Movva    U Henning 《The EMBO journal》1985,4(13A):3593-3598
Information, in addition to that provided by signal sequences, for translocation across the plasma membrane is thought to be present in exported proteins of Escherichia coli. Such information must also exist for the localization of such proteins. To determine the nature of this information, overlapping inframe deletions have been constructed in the ompA gene which codes for a 325-residue major outer membrane protein. In addition, one deletion, encoding only the NH2-terminal part of the protein up to residue 160, was prepared. The location of each product was determined by immunoelectron microscopy. Proteins missing residues 4-45, 43-84, 46-227, 86-227 or 160-325 of the mature protein were all efficiently translocated across the plasma membrane. The first two proteins were found in the outer membrane, the others in the periplasmic space. It has been proposed that export and sorting signals consist of relatively small amino acid sequences near the NH2 terminus of an outer membrane protein. On the basis of sequence homologies it has also been suggested that such proteins possess a common sorting signal. The locations of the partially deleted proteins described here show that a unique export signal does not exist in the OmpA protein. The proposed common sorting signal spans residues 1-14 of OmpA. Since this region is not essential for routing the protein, the existence of a common sorting signal is doubtful. It is suggested that information both for export (if existent) and localization lies within protein conformation which for the former process should be present repeatedly in the polypeptide.  相似文献   

3.
The 325-residue outer membrane protein, OmpA, of Escherichia coli, like most other outer membrane proteins with known sequence, contains no long stretch of hydrophobic amino acids. A synthetic oligonucleotide, encoding the sequence Leu-Ala-Leu-Val, was inserted four times between the codons for amino acid residues 153 and 154 and two, three, or four times between the codons for residues 228 and 229, resulting in the OmpA153-4, OmpA-228-2, -3, and -4 proteins, respectively. In the first case, the lipophilic sequence anchored the protein in the plasma membrane. In the OmpA228 proteins, 16 but not 12 or 8 lipophilic residues most likely also acted as an anchor. By removal of the NH2-terminal signal peptide, the function of the insert in OmpA153-4 was converted to that of a signal-anchor sequence. Possibly due to differences in amino acid sequences surrounding the insert, no signal function was observed with the insert in OmpA228-4. Production of the OmpA153-4 protein, with or without the NH2-terminal signal sequence, resulted in a block of export of chromosomally encoded OmpA. Clearly, long hydrophobic regions are not permitted within proteins destined for the bacterial outer membrane, and these proteins, therefore, have had to evolve another mechanism of membrane assembly.  相似文献   

4.
It has been shown previously that fragments of the Escherichia coli major outer membrane protein OmpA lacking CO2H-terminal parts can be incorporated into this membrane in vivo [Bremer et al. (1982) Eur. J. Biochem. 122, 223-231]. The possibility that these fragments can be used, via gene fusions, as vehicles to transport other proteins to the outer membrane has been investigated. To test whether fragments of a certain size were optimal for this purpose a set of plasmids was prepared encoding 160, 193, 228, 274, and 280 NH2-terminal amino acids of the 325-residue OmpA protein. The 160-residue fragment was not assembled into the outer membrane whereas the others were all incorporated with equal efficiencies. Thus, if any kind of OmpA-associated stop transfer is required during export the corresponding signal might be present between residues 160 and 193 but not CO2H-terminal to 193. The ompA gene was fused to the gene (tet) specifying tetracycline resistance and the gene for the major antigen (vp1) of foot-and-mouth disease virus. In the former case a 584-residue chimeric protein is encoded consisting NH2-terminally of 228 OmpA residues followed by 356 CO2H-terminal residues of the 396-residue 'tetracycline resistance protein'. In the other case the same part of OmpA is followed by 250 CO2H-terminal residues of the 213-residue Vp1 plus 107 residues partly derived from another viral protein and from the vector. Full expression of both hybrids proved to be lethal. Lipophilic sequences bordered by basic residues, present in the non-OmpA parts of both hybrids were considered as candidates for the lethal effect. A plasmid was constructed which codes for 280 OmpA residues followed by a 31-residue tail containing the sequence: -Phe-Val-Ile-Met-Val-Ile-Ala-Val-Ser-Cys-Lys-. Expression of this hybrid gene was lethal but by changing the reading frame for the tail to encode another, 30-residue sequence the deleterious effect was abolished. It is possible that the sequence incriminated acts as a stop signal for transfer through the plasma membrane thereby jamming export sites for other proteins and causing lethality. If so, OmpA appears to cross the plasma membrane completely during export.  相似文献   

5.
The 325-residue OmpA protein, which is synthesized as a precursor with a 21-residue signal sequence, is a polypeptide of the outer membrane of Escherichia coli K-12. The signal peptide is able to direct translocation across the plasma membrane of virtually any fragment of this protein. It had, therefore, been concluded that information required for this translocation does not exist within the mature part of the protein. This view has been criticized and it was suggested that our data showed that both the signal sequence and residues within the first 44 amino acid residues of the mature protein contributed to an optimal translocation mechanism. It is shown that, at least as far as is detectable, this is not so. The apparent rates of processing of various pro-OmpA constructs were measured. It was found that these rates did not depend on the presence of amino acid residues 4 through 45 but on the size of the polypeptides; the processing rate decreased with decreasing size. A possible explanation for this phenomenon is offered. While the results do not exclude the possibility that a defined area of the mature protein is involved in optimizing translocation, there is so far no evidence for it.  相似文献   

6.
Summary The gene ompA encodes a major outer membrane protein of Escherichia coli. Localized mutagenesis of the part of the gene corresponding to the 21-residue signal sequence and the first 45 residues of the protein resulted in alterations which caused cell lysis when expressed. DNA sequence analyses revealed that in one mutant type the last CO2H-terminal residue of the signal sequence, alanine, was replaced by valine. The proteolytic removal of the signal peptide was much delayed and most of the unprocessed precursor protein was fractioned with the outer membrane. However, this precursor was completely soluble in sodium lauryl sarcosinate which does not solubilize the OmpA protein or fragments thereof present in the outer membrane. Synthesis of the mutant protein did not inhibit processing of the OmpA or OmpF proteins. In the other mutant type, multiple mutational alterations had occurred leading to four amino acid substitutions in the signal sequence and two affecting the first two residues of the mature protein. A reduced rate of processing could not be clearly demonstrated. Membrane fractionation suggested that small amounts of this precursor were associated with the plasma membrane but synthesis of this mutant protein also did not inhibit processing of the wild-type OmpA or OmpF proteins. Several lines of evidence left no doubt that the mature, mutant protein is stably incorporated into the outer membrane. It is suggested that the presence, in the outer membrane, of the mutant precursor protein in the former case, or of the mutant protein in the latter case perturbs the membrane architecture enough to cause cell death.  相似文献   

7.
The 325-residue OmpA protein is one of the major outer membrane proteins of Escherichia coli. It serves as the receptor for several T-even-like phages and is required for the action of certain colicins and for the stabilization of mating aggregates in conjugation. We have isolated two mutant alleles of the cloned ompA gene which produce a protein that no longer functions as a phage receptor. Bacteria possessing the mutant proteins were unable to bind the phages, either reversibly or irreversibly. However, both proteins still functioned in conjugation, and one of them conferred colicin L sensitivity. DNA sequence analysis showed that the phage-resistant, colicin-sensitive phenotype exhibited by one mutant was due to the amino acid substitution Gly leads to Arg at position 70. The second mutant, which contained a tandem duplication, encodes a larger product with 8 additional amino acid residues, 7 of which are a repeat of the sequence between residues 57 and 63. In contrast to the wild-type OmpA protein, this derivative was partially digested by pronase when intact cells were treated with the enzyme. The protease removed 64 NH2-terminal residues, thereby indicating that this part of the protein is exposed to the outside. It is argued that the phage receptor site is most likely situated around residues 60 to 70 of the OmpA protein and that the alterations characterized have directly affected this site.  相似文献   

8.
Results of studies, mostly using the outer membrane, 325 residue protein OmpA, are reviewed which concern its translocation across the plasma membrane and incorporation into the outer membrane ofEscherichia coli. For translocation, neither a unique export signal, acting in a positive fashion within the mature part of the precursor, nor a unique conformation of the precursor is required. Rather, the mature part of a secretory protein has to be export-compatible. Export-incompatibility can be caused by a stretch of 16 (but not 8 or 12) hydrophobic residues, too low a size of the polypeptide (smaller than 75 residue precursors), net positive charge at the N-terminus, or lack of a turn potential at the same site. It is not yet clear whether binding sites for chaperonins (SecB, trigger factor, GroEL) within OmpA are importantin vivo. The mechanism of sorting of outer membrane proteins is not yet understood. The membrane part of OmpA, encompassing residues 1 to about 170, it thought to traverse the membrane eight times in antiparallel -sheet conformation. At least the structure of the last -strand (residues 160–170) is of crucial importance for membrane assembly. It must be amphiphilic or hydrophobic, these properties must extend over at least nine residues, and it must not contain a proline residue at or near its center. Membrane incorporation of OmpA involves a conformational change of the protein and it could be that the last -strand initiates folding and assembly in the outer membrane.  相似文献   

9.
T Watanabe  S Hayashi    H C Wu 《Journal of bacteriology》1988,170(9):4001-4007
Export of the outer membrane lipoprotein in Escherichia coli was examined in conditionally lethal mutants that were defective in protein export in general, including secA, secB, secC, and secD. Lipoprotein export was affected in a secA(Ts) mutant of E. coli at the nonpermissive temperature; it was also affected in a secA(Am) mutant of E. coli at the permissive temperature, but not at the nonpermissive temperature. The export of lipoprotein occurred normally in E. coli carrying a null secB::Tn5 mutation; on the other hand, the export of an OmpF::Lpp hybrid protein, consisting of the signal sequence plus 11 amino acid residues of mature OmpF and mature lipoprotein, was affected by the secB mutation. The synthesis of lipoprotein was reduced in the secC mutant at the nonpermissive temperature, as was the case for synthesis of the maltose-binding protein, while the synthesis of OmpA was not affected. Lipoprotein export was found to be slightly affected in secD(Cs) mutants at the nonpermissive temperature. These results taken together indicate that the export of lipoprotein shares the common requirements for functional SecA and SecD proteins with other exported proteins, but does not require a functional SecB protein. SecC protein (ribosomal protein S15) is required for the optimal synthesis of lipoprotein.  相似文献   

10.
The mechanism of sorting, to the outer membrane, of the 325-residue Escherichia coli protein OmpA has been investigated. It is thought to traverse the membrane eight times in antiparallel beta-strands, forming an amphiphilic beta-barrel which encompasses residues 1 to about 170; the COOH-terminal moiety is periplasmic. A mutant, carrying the substitutions Leu164----Pro and Val166----Asp within the last beta-strand (residues 160-170), has been described which was unable to assemble in the membrane (Klose, M., MacIntyre, S., Schwarz, H., and Henning, U. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 13297-13302). Linkers were inserted between the codons for residues 164 and 165 of the mutant protein. Of 13 different genes recovered, five encoded proteins which had regained the ability to assemble in the membrane. The properties of the mutant proteins, together with a structure prediction method, indicate the following rules for the final beta-strand to be compatible with, or possibly initiate, membrane insertion: (i) it must be amphiphilic or hydrophobic while its primary structure as such is fairly unimportant, (ii) it must extend over at least 9 residues, and (iii) it must not contain a proline residue around its center. One of the genes recovered coded for OmpA up to residue 164 and then followed by 10 linker-encoded residues. This 174-residue polypeptide was assembled in the membrane but did not, in contrast to all other proteins, expose sites sensitive to trypsin at the inner face of the membrane. This behavior agrees perfectly well with the OmpA model.  相似文献   

11.
The egl gene of Pseudomonas solanacearum encodes a 43-kDa extracellular endoglucanase (mEGL) involved in wilt disease caused by this phytopathogen. Egl is initially translated with a 45-residue, two-part leader sequence. The first 19 residues are apparently removed by signal peptidase II during export of Egl across the inner membrane (IM); the remaining residues of the leader sequence (modified with palmitate) are removed during export across the outer membrane (OM). Localization of Egl-PhoA fusion proteins showed that the first 26 residues of the Egl leader sequence are required and sufficient to direct lipid modification, processing, and export of Egl or PhoA across the IM but not the OM. Fusions of the complete 45-residue leader sequence or of the leader and increasing portions of mEgl sequences to PhoA did not cause its export across the OM. In-frame deletion of portions of mEGL-coding sequences blocked export of the truncated polypeptides across the OM without affecting export across the IM. These results indicate that the first part of the leader sequence functions independently to direct export of Egl across the IM while the second part and sequences and structures in mEGL are involved in export across the OM. Computer analysis of the mEgl amino acid sequence obtained from its nucleotide sequence identified a region of mEGL similar in amino acid sequence to regions in other prokaryotic endoglucanases.  相似文献   

12.
Escherichia coli heat-stable enterotoxin Ip (STIp) is an extracellular toxin consisting of 18 amino acid residues that is synthesized as a precursor of pre (amino acid residues 1 to 19), pro (amino acid residues 20 to 54), and mature (amino acid residues 55 to 72) regions. The precursor synthesized in the cytoplasm is translocated across the inner membrane by the general export pathway consisting of Sec proteins. The pre region functions as a leader peptide and is cleaved during translocation. However, it remains unknown how the resulting peptide (pro-mature peptide) translocates across the outer membrane. In this study, we investigated the structure of the STIp that passes through the outer membrane to determine how it translocates through the outer membrane. The results showed that the pro region is cleaved in the periplasmic space. The generated peptide becomes the mature form of STIp, which happens to have disulfide bonds, which then passes through the outer membrane. We also showed that STIp with a carboxy-terminal peptide consisting of 3 amino acid residues passes through the outer membrane, whereas STIp with a peptide composed of 37 residues does not. Amino acid analysis of mutant STIp purified from culture supernatant revealed that the peptide composed of 37 amino acid residues was cleaved into fragments of 5 amino acid residues. In addition, analyses of STIps with a mutation at the cysteine residue and the dsbA mutant strain revealed that the formation of an intramolecular disulfide bond within STIp is not absolutely required for the mature region of STIp to pass through the outer membrane.  相似文献   

13.
The membrane part of the 325-residue outer membrane protein OmpA of Escherichia coli encompasses residues 1-177. This part is thought to cross the membrane eight times in antiparallel beta-strands, forming four loops of an amphipathic beta-barrel. With the aim of gaining some insight into the mechanism of sorting, i.e. the way the protein recognizes and assembles into its membrane, a set of point mutants in the ompA gene has been generated. Selection for toxicity of ompA expression following mutagenesis with sodium bisulfite yielded genes with multiple base pair substitutions, the majority of which resulted in amino acid substitutions in the membrane moiety of the protein. None of the altered proteins was blocked in membrane incorporation. A proline residue exists at or near each of the presumed turns at the inner side of the outer membrane. Using oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis, each of them was replaced by a leucine residue which is thought to be a turn blocking residue. None of these proteins had lost the ability to be incorporated into the membrane. Apparently, leucine residues are tolerated at turns in this protein. To interfere with the formation of antiparallel beta-strands, four double mutants were prepared: ompA-ON3 (Ala11----Pro, Leu13----Pro), -ON4 (Ala11----Asp, Leu13----Pro), -ON5 (Gly160----Val, Leu162----Arg), and -ON6 (Leu164----Pro, Val166----Asp). The former three proteins and even quadruple mutants consisting of a combination of ompA-ON2 or -ON4 with -ON5 were not defective in membrane assembly. In contrast, the OmpA-ON6 protein was translocated across the plasma membrane but could not be incorporated into the outer membrane. It is concluded that at least one rather small area of the polypeptide is of crucial importance for the assembly of OmpA into the outer membrane.  相似文献   

14.
The pglA gene encodes a 52-kilodalton extracellular polygalacturonase (PGA) which is associated with the phytopathogenic virulence of Pseudomonas solanacearum. The nucleotide sequence of pglA and the putative amino acid sequence of the PGA protein were determined. A computer search identified a 150-residue region of PGA which was similar (41%) to the amino acid sequence of a region of the PG-2A polygalacturonase from tomato. Comparison of the amino terminus of the pglA open reading frame with the actual amino-terminal sequence of purified extracellular PGA suggested that pglA is initially translated as a higher-molecular-mass precursor with a 21-residue amino-terminal signal sequence. Localization of various pglA-phoA fusion proteins in Escherichia coli and P. solanacearum indicated that the 21-residue leader sequence directs the export of PhoA only as far as the periplasm of both bacteria. Deletion of the last 13 residues of PGA eliminated its catalytic activity, as well as its ability to be exported outside of the P. solanacearum cell. Our results suggest that PGA excretion occurs in two steps. The first step involves a signal sequence cleavage mechanism similar to that used for periplasmic proteins and results in export of PGA across the inner membrane; the second step (transit of the outer membrane) occurs by an unknown mechanism requiring sequences from the mature PGA protein and biochemical factors absent from E. coli.  相似文献   

15.
Synthesis of OmpA protein of Escherichia coli K12 in Bacillus subtilis   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
We have inserted a C-terminally truncated gene of the major outer membrane protein OmpA of Escherichia coli downstream from the promoter and signal sequence of the secretory alpha-amylase of Bacillus amyloliquefaciens in a secretion vector of Bacillus subtilis. B. subtilis transformed with the hybrid plasmid synthesized a protein that was immunologically identified as OmpA. All the protein was present in the particulate fraction. The size of the protein compared to the peptide synthesized in vitro from the same template indicated that the alpha-amylase derived signal peptide was not removed; this was verified by N-terminal amino acid sequence determination. The lack of cleavage suggests that there was little or no translocation of OmpA protein across the cytoplasmic membrane. This is an unexpected difference compared with periplasmic proteins, which were both secreted and processed when fused to the same signal peptide. A requirement of a specific component for the export of outer membrane proteins is suggested.  相似文献   

16.
A protein of apparent Mr = 15,000 on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis is the major plasma membrane substrate for cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PK-A) and protein kinase C (PK-C) in several different tissues. In the work described here, we purified, cloned, and sequenced the canine cardiac sarcolemmal "15-kDa protein." The amino terminus of the purified protein was not blocked, allowing determination of 50 consecutive residues by standard Edman degradation. Overlapping proteolytic phosphopeptides yielded 22 additional residues at the carboxyl terminus. Dideoxy sequencing of the full-length cDNA confirmed that the 15-kDa protein contains 72 amino acids, plus a 20-residue signal sequence. The mature protein has a calculated Mr = 8409. There is one hydrophobic membrane-spanning segment composed of residues 18-37. The acidic amino-terminal end (residues 1-17) of the protein is oriented extracellularly, whereas the basic carboxyl-terminal end (residues 38-72) projects into the cytoplasm. The positively charged carboxyl terminus contains the phosphorylation sites for PK-A and PK-C. In the transmembrane region, the 15-kDa protein exhibits 52% amino acid identity with the "gamma" subunit of Na,K-ATPase. High stringency Northern blot analysis revealed that 15-kDa mRNA is present in heart, skeletal muscle, smooth muscle, and liver but absent from brain and kidney. We propose the name "phospholemman" for the 15-kDa protein, which denotes the protein's location within the plasma membrane and its characteristic multisite phosphorylation.  相似文献   

17.
cDNA cloning was used to deduce the complete amino acid sequence of canine cardiac calsequestrin, the principal Ca2+-binding protein of cardiac junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum. Cardiac calsequestrin contains 391 amino acid residues plus a 19-residue amino-terminal signal sequence. The molecular weight of the mature protein, excluding carbohydrate, is 45,269. Cardiac calsequestrin is highly acidic, and a striking feature is the enrichment of acidic residues (60%) within the 63 carboxyl-terminal residues. No part of the sequence contains EF hand Ca2+-binding structures. The photo-affinity probe 3-(trifluoromethyl)-3-(m-[125I]iodophenyl)diazirine was used to localize the Ca2+-regulated hydrophobic site to amino acid residues 192-223. The cardiac and skeletal muscle isoforms of calsequestrin (Fliegel, L., Ohnishi, M., Carpenter, M. R., Khanna, V. K., Reithmeier, R. A. F., and MacLennan, D. H. (1987) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 84, 1167-1171), although the products of different genes, are 65% identical, are acidic, and share one glycosylation site. However, cardiac calsequestrin has several unique features. First, it has a 31-amino acid extension at its carboxyl terminus (residues 361-391), which contains 71% acidic residues and a second glycosylation site. Second, its mRNA contains a second open reading frame with the capacity to code for a 111-amino acid protein. Third, contrary to the restricted expression of the fast skeletal isoform, cardiac calsequestrin mRNA is present in both cardiac and slow skeletal muscle, but not in fast skeletal muscle. We conclude that the deduced amino acid sequence of cardiac calsequestrin is consistent with its ability to bind large amounts of Ca2+ (40 mol of Ca2+/mol of calsequestrin). The protein probably binds Ca2+ by acting as a charged surface rather than by presenting multiple discrete Ca2+-binding sites.  相似文献   

18.
The outer membrane protein OmpA of Escherichia coli K-12 serves as a receptor for a number of T-even-like phages. We have isolated a series of ompA mutants which are resistant to such phages but which still produce the OmpA protein. None of the mutants was able to either irreversibly or reversibly bind the phage with which they had been selected. Also, the OmpA protein is required for the action of colicins K and L and for the stabilization of mating aggregates in conjugation. Conjugal proficiency was unaltered in all cases. Various degrees of colicin resistance was found; however, the resistance pattern did not correlate with the phage resistance pattern. DNA sequence analyses revealed that, in the mutants, the 325-residue OmpA protein had suffered the following alterations: Gly-65----Asp, Gly-65----Arg, Glu-68----Gly, Glu-68----Lys (two isolates), Gly-70----Asp (four isolates), Gly-70----Val, Ala-Asp-Thr-Lys-107----Ala-Lys (caused by a 6-base-pair deletion), Val-110----Asp, and Gly-154----Ser. These mutants exhibited a complex pattern of resistance-sensitivity to 14 different OmpA-specific phages, suggesting that they recognize different areas of the protein. In addition to the three clusters of mutational alterations around residues 68, 110, and 154, a site around residue 25 has been predicted to be involved in conjugation and in binding of a phage and a bacteriocin (R. Freudl, and S. T. Cole, Eur. J. Biochem, 134:497-502, 1983; G. Braun and S. T. Cole, Mol. Gen. Genet, in press). These four areas are regularly spaced, being about 40 residues apart from each other. A model is suggested in which the OmpA polypeptide repeatedly traverses the outer membrane in cross-beta structure, exposing the four areas to the outside.  相似文献   

19.
In previous investigations, we have examined the effect of OmpA signal peptide mutations on the secretion of the two heterologous proteins TEM beta-lactamase and nuclease A. During these studies, we observed that a given signal peptide mutation could affect differentially the processing of precursor OmpA-nuclease or precursor OmpA-lactamase. This observation led us to further investigate the influence of the mature region of a precursor protein on protein export. Preexisting OmpA signal peptide mutations of known secretion phenotype when directing heterologous protein export (nuclease A or beta-lactamase) were fused to the homologous mature OmpA protein. Four signal peptide mutations that have previously been shown to prevent export of nuclease A and beta-lactamase were found to support OmpA protein export, albeit at reduced rates. This remarkable retention of export activity by severely defective precursor OmpA signal peptide mutants may be due to the ability of mature OmpA to interact with the cytoplasmic membrane. In addition, these same signal peptide mutations can affect the level of OmpA synthesis as well as its proper assembly in the outer membrane of Escherichia coli. Two signal peptide mutations dramatically stimulate the rate of precursor OmpA synthesis three- to fivefold above the level observed when a wild-type signal peptide is directing export. The complete removal of the OmpA signal peptide does not result in increased OmpA synthesis. This finding suggests that the signal peptide mutations function positively to stimulate OmpA synthesis, rather than bypass a down-regulatory mechanism effected by a wild-type signal peptide. Overproduction of wild-type precursor OmpA or precursors containing signal peptide mutations which lead to relatively minor kinetic processing defects results in accumulation of an improperly assembled OmpA species (imp-OmpA). In contrast, signal peptide mutations which cause relatively severe processing defects accumulate no or only small quantities of imp-OmpA. All mutations result in equivalent levels of properly assembled OmpA. Thus, a strong correlation between imp-OmpA accumulation and cell toxicity was observed. A mutation in the mature region of OmpA which prevents the proper outer membrane assembly of OmpA was suppressed when export was directed by a severely defective signal peptide. These findings suggest that signal peptide mutations indirectly influence OmpA assembly in the outer membrane by altering both the level and rate of OmpA secretion across the cytoplasmic membrane.  相似文献   

20.
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