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排序方式: 共有304条查询结果,搜索用时 19 毫秒
1.
OmpA is a major protein of the outer membrane of Escherichia coli. It is made as a larger precursor, pro-OmpA, which requires a membrane potential for processing. We now show that pro-OmpA accumulates in the cytoplasm of cells treated with carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone, an uncouple which lowers the membrane potential. Upon restoration of the potential, this pro-OmpA is secreted, processed, and assembled into the outer membrane. Pro-OmpA made in vitro is also recovered with the postribosomal supernatant. It is efficiently processed to OmpA by liposomes which have bacterial leader peptidase that is exclusively internally oriented. These experiments show that: (i) the insertion of pro-OmpA into the plasma membrane is not coupled to its synthesis; (ii) insertion is promoted by the transmembrane electrochemical potential; (iii) pro-OmpA can cross a bilayer spontaneously; and (iv) pro-OmpA is processed by the same leader peptidase which converts M13 procoat to coat.  相似文献   
2.
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae SKI (superkiller) genes are repressors of replication of M, L-A, and L-BC double-stranded (ds) RNAs; ski strains have an increased M dsRNA copy number and, as a result, are cold-sensitive for growth at 8 degrees. Growth is normal, however, at higher temperatures. We have found a new cytoplasmic genetic element [D] (for disease) that makes M1 dsRNA-containing superkiller strains grow slowly at 30 degrees, not at all at 37 degrees, and only very poorly at 20 degrees. These growth defects require three factors: a chromosomal ski mutation, the presence of M1 dsRNA, and the presence of the new cytoplasmic factor, [D]. We have isolated mutants unable to maintain [D] (mad), at least one of which is due to mutation of a single chromosomal locus. Further, [D] can be cured by growth at 37-39 degrees. We present evidence that [D] is not M, L-A, L-BC or W dsRNAs or mitochondrial DNA, 2 mu DNA, or [psi], but [D] depends on L-A for its maintenance. We also show that [D] is distinct from [B], a cytoplasmic element that allows M1 dsRNA to be stably replicated and maintained in spite of defects in certain chromosomal MAK genes that would otherwise be necessary. [D] activity is blocked by the presence of another extrachromosomal element, called [DIN] (for [D] interference). [D] and [DIN] may be different natural variants of the same molecule.  相似文献   
3.
We have reconstituted protein translocation across plasma membrane vesicles of Escherichia coli using purified proOmpA and trigger factor, a 63 kd soluble protein. Treatment of membrane vesicles with urea inactivates them for translocation unless a factor present in cytoplasmic extracts is added during the translocation reaction. Sedimentation analysis showed that the stimulatory activity is of distinctly higher mol. wt than trigger factor. Cytoplasmic extracts from a strain that greatly overproduces the SecA protein are highly enriched in the stimulatory activity for untreated membranes and restore translocation to urea-treated membranes, suggesting that this protein is the stimulatory factor. This assay was used to monitor the isolation of SecA protein from the overproducing strain. The purified protein is soluble, yet binds peripherally to membranes with high affinity and supports translocation. Using pure proOmpA, SecA protein, trigger factor and urea-treated membranes, the protein export process was resolved into binding and translocation steps. We find that proOmpA binds to membrane vesicles with or without SecA protein, but that translocation only occurs when SecA was bound prior to proOmpA.  相似文献   
4.
E Crooke  B Guthrie  S Lecker  R Lill  W Wickner 《Cell》1988,54(7):1003-1011
We have isolated large amounts of E. coli outer-membrane protein A precursor (proOmpA). Purified proOmpA is active in membrane assembly, and this assembly is saturable with respect to the precursor protein. A proOmpA-Sepharose matrix allows affinity isolation of trigger factor, a soluble, 63,000 dalton monomeric protein that stabilizes proOmpA in assembly competent form. Comparison of trigger factor's amino-terminal sequence with those in a computer data bank and with those encoded by sec genes, as well as groEL and heat shock gene dnaK, suggests that trigger factor is encoded by a previously undescribed gene. Trigger factor and proOmpA form a 1:1 complex that can be isolated by gel filtration. Purified canine signal recognition particle (SRP) can also stabilize proOmpA for membrane insertion. This postribosomal activity of SRP suggests a unifying theme in protein translocation mechanisms.  相似文献   
5.
Summary The chorismate mutase structural gene, ARO7, which is necessary for both phenylalanine and tyrosine biosynthesis was cloned by complementation in yeast. Genetic analysis showed that ARO7 was identical to a gene necessary for growth in hypertonic medium, OSM2, which mapped nearby. After restriction mapping and subcloning of the plasmid, the cloned gene was used to detect mRNA levels in several growth conditions. Enzyme activities were measured in various genotypes. At our level of detection ARO7-OSM2 is a low level constitutively expressed gene.  相似文献   
6.
Conditionally lethal Escherichia coli mutants in secY (prlA) show defective export of proteins to the periplasm and outer membrane. It has been proposed that this gene and other sec genes must act on pro-OmpA at an early stage of protein synthesis in order to allow later translocation to occur. We have described a temperature-sensitive mutation in which the secYts function is impaired at the nonpermissive temperature (Ito, K. (1984) Mol. Gen. Genet. 197, 204-208). A plasmid bearing the wild-type secY gene under the control of the lactose operon (Shiba, K., Ito, K., Yura, T., and Cerretti, D. P. (1984) EMBO J. 3, 631-635) has been introduced into this mutant strain. We now report that the in vivo chase of pulse-labeled full length pro-OmpA to mature OmpA is accelerated by inducing the synthesis of the wild-type secY protein at the end of the period of pulse labeling. We have also assayed the requirements for secY function for in vitro protein translocation. Membranes derived from secY ts cells which were incubated at 42 degrees C were inactive in vitro in the post-translational uptake and processing of pro-OmpA. Thus, the secY protein can act post-translationally, enhancing the translocation of completed pro-OmpA polypeptide chains across the plasma membrane.  相似文献   
7.
The lambda O and P gene products are required for the initiation of lambda DNA replication. In order to study the biochemistry of this process, we have constructed plasmids that carry the lambda O gene, P gene, and half of the O gene coding for the amino-terminal half of the O protein. Each is under the control of the inducible lambda promoter, PL. We have purified these three proteins from induced cells carrying the plasmids. Our results show that the amino-terminal portion of the O protein binds to the lambda origin of replication in a manner similar to the intact lambda O protein, demonstrating that the amino-terminal portion of O protein contains the DNA binding domain. Using chromatographic procedures, we have isolated a complex of lambda O and P proteins with lambda dv DNA. The amino-terminal portion of the O protein does not complex with P protein under the same conditions. This suggests that the specificity of the lambda O protein for P protein resides in the carboxyl-terminal half of the lambda O protein. Our results also show that, while the intact O protein is active in in vitro replication of lambda dv plasmid DNA, the amino-terminal portion of the O protein is inactive and is a competitive inhibitor of the lambda O protein in this reaction. These results confirm previous genetic observations that were interpreted as indicating a bifunctional structure for the lambda O protein with the amino-terminal domain recognizing the lambda origin of replication and the carboxyl-terminal domain interacting with the lambda P protein.  相似文献   
8.
M13 procoat inserts into liposomes in the absence of other membrane proteins   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
Procoat, the precursor form of the major coat protein of coliphage M13, assembles into the Escherichia coli inner membrane and is cleaved to mature coat protein by leader peptidase. This assembly process has previously been reconstituted using lipids and purified leader peptidase in a cell-free protein synthesis reaction (Watts, C., Silver, P., and Wickner, W. (1981) Cell 25, 347-353; Ohno-Iwashita, Y., and Wickner, W. (1983) J. Biol. Chem. 258, 1895-1900). We now report that procoat can also cross a liposomal membrane composed of only purified phospholipids; leader peptidase is not needed to catalyze insertion. When procoat is synthesized in vitro in the presence of liposomes with encapsulated chymotrypsin, the procoat inserts spontaneously through the membrane and is degraded. The protease was shown by several criteria to be in the lumen of the liposomes. These results demonstrate that the precursor form of an E. coli integral membrane protein can cross a membrane without the aid of leader peptidase or any other membrane proteins.  相似文献   
9.
Leader peptidase cleaves the amino-terminal leader sequences of many secreted and membrane proteins. We have examined the function of leader peptidase by constructing an Escherichia coli strain where its synthesis is controlled by the arabinose B promoter. This strain requires arabinose for growth. When the synthesis of leader peptidase is repressed, protein precursors accumulate, including the precursors of M13 coat protein (an inner membrane protein), maltose binding protein (a periplasmic protein), and OmpA protein (an outer membrane protein). These precursors are translocated across the plasma membrane, as judged by their sensitivity to added proteinase K. However, pro-OmpA and pre-maltose binding protein are retained at the outer surface of the inner membrane. Thus, leader peptides anchor translocated pre-proteins to the outer surface of the plasma membrane and must be removed to allow their subsequent release into the periplasm or transit to the outer membrane.  相似文献   
10.
Many secreted and membrane proteins have amino-terminal leader peptides which are essential for their insertion across the membrane bilayer. These precursor proteins, whether from prokaryotic or eukaryotic sources, can be processed to their mature forms in vitro by bacterial leader peptidase. While different leader peptides have shared features, they do not share a unique sequence at the cleavage site. To examine the requirements for substrate recognition by leader peptidase, we have truncated M13 procoat, a membrane protein precursor, from both the amino- and carboxy-terminal ends with specific proteases or chemical cleavage agents. The fragments isolated from these reactions were assayed as substrates for leader peptidase. A 16 amino acid residue peptide which spans the leader peptidase cleavage site is accurately cleaved. Neither the basic amino-terminal region nor most of the hydrophobic central region of the leader peptide are essential for accurate cleavage.  相似文献   
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