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1.
The thylakoid DeltapH-dependent pathway transports folded proteins with twin arginine-containing signal peptides. Identified components of the machinery include cpTatC, Hcf106, and Tha4. The reaction occurs in two steps: precursor binding to the machinery, and transport across the membrane. Here, we show that a cpTatC-Hcf106 complex serves as receptor for specific binding of twin arginine-containing precursors. Antibodies to either Hcf106 or cpTatC, but not Tha4, inhibited precursor binding. Blue native gel electrophoresis and coimmunoprecipitation of digitonin-solubilized thylakoids showed that Hcf106 and cpTatC are members of an approximately 700-kD complex that lacks Tha4. Thylakoid-bound precursor proteins were also associated with an approximately 700-kD complex and were coimmunoprecipitated with antibodies to cpTatC or Hcf106. Chemical cross-linking revealed that precursors make direct contact with cpTatC and Hcf106 and confirmed that Tha4 is not associated with precursor, cpTatC, or Hcf106 in the membrane. Precursor binding to the cpTatC-Hcf106 complex required both the twin arginine and the hydrophobic core of the signal peptide. Precursors remained bound to the complex when Tha4 was sequestered by antibody, even in the presence of DeltapH. These results indicate that precursor binding to the cpTatC-Hcf106 complex constitutes the recognition event for this pathway and that subsequent participation by Tha4 leads to translocation.  相似文献   

2.
The Tat (twin arginine translocation) systems of thylakoids and bacteria transport fully folded protein substrates without breaching the permeability barrier of the membrane. Two components of the thylakoid system, cpTatC and Hcf106, compose a precursor-bound receptor complex. The third component, Tha4, assembles with the precursor-bound receptor complex for the translocation step and is thought to compose at least part of the protein-conducting channel. Here, we used two different cross-linking approaches to explore the organization of Tha4 in the translocase. These cross-linking techniques showed that transition to an active protein transport state resulted in an alignment of the Tha4 amphipathic helix and C-terminal tail domains to form Tha4 oligomers. Oligomerization required functional Tha4, a twin arginine signal peptide, and an active cpTatC-Hcf106 receptor complex. The spectrum of oligomers obtained was independent of the mature folded domain of the precursor. We propose a trapdoor mechanism for translocation whereby aligned oligomers of Tha4 amphipathic helices fold into the membrane to allow formfitting passage of precursor proteins.  相似文献   

3.
The thylakoid t win a rginine protein t ranslocation (Tat) system is thought to have a multivalent receptor complex with each cpTatC‐Hcf106 pair constituting a signal peptide‐binding unit. Conceptual models suggest that translocation of individual precursor proteins occurs upon assembly of a Tha4 oligomer with a precursor‐occupied cpTatC‐Hcf106. However, results reported here reveal that multiple precursor proteins bound to a single receptor complex can be transported together. Precursor proteins that contain one or two cysteine residues readily formed intermolecular disulphide bonds upon binding to the receptor complex, resulting in dimeric and tetrameric precursor proteins. Three lines of evidence indicate that all members of precursor oligomers were specifically bound to a receptor unit. Blue native–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis showed that oligomers were present on individual receptor complexes rather than bridging two or more receptor complexes. Upon energizing the membrane, the dimeric and tetrameric precursors were transported across the membrane with efficiencies comparable with that of monomeric precursors. These results imply a novel aspect of Tat systems, whereby multiple precursor‐binding sites can act in concert to transport an interlinked oligo‐precursor protein.  相似文献   

4.
The twin-arginine translocase (Tat) transports folded proteins across tightly sealed membranes. cpTatC is the core component of the thylakoid translocase and coordinates transport through interactions with the substrate signal peptide and other Tat components, notably the Tha4 pore-forming component. Here, Cys–Cys matching mapped Tha4 contact sites on cpTatC and assessed the role of signal peptide binding on Tha4 assembly with the cpTatC–Hcf106 receptor complex. Tha4 made contact with a peripheral cpTatC site in nonstimulated membranes. In the translocase, Tha4 made an additional contact within the cup-shaped cavity of cpTatC that likely seeds Tha4 polymerization to form the pore. Substrate binding triggers assembly of Tha4 onto the interior site. We provide evidence that the substrate signal peptide inserts between cpTatC subunits arranged in a manner that conceivably forms an enclosed chamber. The location of the inserted signal peptide and the Tha4–cpTatC contact data suggest a model for signal peptide–gated Tha4 entry into the chamber to form the translocase.  相似文献   

5.
Assembly of the components of the thylakoid deltapH-dependent/Tat protein transport machinery was analyzed in vitro. Upon incubation with intact chloroplasts, precursors to all three components, Hcf106, cpTatC and Tha4, were imported into the organelle and assembled into characteristic endogenous complexes. In particular, all of the imported cpTatC and approximately two-thirds of the imported Hcf106 functionally assembled into 700 kDa complexes capable of binding Tat pathway precursor proteins. The amounts assembled into thylakoids by this procedure were moderate. However, physiological quantities of mature forms of Tha4 and Hcf106 were integrated into isolated thylakoids and a significant percentage of the Hcf106 so integrated was assembled into the 700 kDa complex. Interestingly, a mutant form of Hcf106 in which an invariant transmembrane glutamate was changed to glutamine integrated into the membrane but did not assemble into the receptor complex. Analysis of energy and known pathway component requirements indicated that Hcf106 and Tha4 integrate by an unassisted or 'spontaneous' mechanism. The functionality of in vitro integrated Tha4 was verified by its ability to restore transport to thylakoid membranes from the maize tha4 mutant, which lacks the Tha4 protein. Development of this functional in vitro assembly assay will facilitate structure-function studies of the thylakoid Tat pathway translocation machinery.  相似文献   

6.
Twin arginine transport (Tat) systems transport folded proteins using proton-motive force as sole energy source. The thylakoid Tat system comprises three membrane components. A complex composed of cpTatC and Hcf106 is the twin arginine signal peptide receptor. Signal peptide binding triggers assembly of Tha4 for the translocation step. Tha4 is thought to serve as the protein-conducting element, and the topology it adopts during transport produces the transmembrane passageway. We analyzed Tha4 topology and conformation in actively transporting translocases and compared that with Tha4 in nontransporting membranes. Using cysteine accessibility labeling techniques and diagnostic protease protection assays, we confirm an overall NOUT-CIN topology for Tha4 that is maintained under transport conditions. Significantly, the amphipathic helix (APH) and C-tail exhibited substantial changes in accessibility when actively engaged in protein transport. Compared with resting state, cysteines within the APH became less accessible to stromally applied modifying reagent. The APH proximal C-tail, although still accessible to Cys-directed reagents, was much less accessible to protease. We attribute these changes in accessibility to indicate the Tha4 conformation that is adopted in the translocase primed for translocation. We propose that in the primed translocase, the APH partitions more extensively and uniformly into the membrane interface and the C-tails pack closer together in a mesh-like network. Implications for the mode by which the substrate protein crosses the bilayer are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
Twin arginine translocation (Tat) systems transport large folded proteins across sealed membranes. Tat systems accomplish this feat with three membrane components organized in two complexes. In thylakoid membranes, cpTatC and Hcf106 comprise a large receptor complex containing an estimated eight cpTatC-Hcf106 pairs. Protein transport occurs when Tha4 joins the receptor complex as an oligomer of uncertain size that is thought to form the protein-conducting structure. Here, binding analyses with intact membranes or purified complexes indicate that each receptor complex could bind eight precursor proteins. Kinetic analysis of translocation showed that each precursor-bound site was independently functional for transport, and, with sufficient Tha4, all sites were concurrently active for transport. Tha4 titration determined that ~26 Tha4 protomers were required for transport of each OE17 (oxygen-evolving complex subunit of 17 kD) precursor protein. Our results suggest that, when fully saturated with precursor proteins and Tha4, the Tat translocase is an ~2.2-megadalton complex that can individually transport eight precursor proteins or cooperatively transport multimeric precursors.  相似文献   

8.
The thylakoid DeltapH-dependent/Tat pathway is a novel system with the remarkable ability to transport tightly folded precursor proteins using a transmembrane DeltapH as the sole energy source. Three known components of the transport machinery exist in two distinct subcomplexes. A cpTatC-Hcf106 complex serves as precursor receptor and a Tha4 complex is required after precursor recognition. Here we report that Tha4 assembles with cpTatC-Hcf106 during the translocation step. Interactions among components were examined by chemical cross-linking of intact thylakoids followed by immunoprecipitation and immunoblotting. cpTatC and Hcf106 were consistently associated under all conditions tested. In contrast, Tha4 was only associated with cpTatC and Hcf106 in the presence of a functional precursor and the DeltapH. Interestingly, a synthetic signal peptide could replace intact precursor in triggering assembly. The association of all three components was transient and dissipated upon the completion of protein translocation. Such an assembly-disassembly cycle could explain how the DeltapH/Tat system can assemble translocases to accommodate folded proteins of varied size. It also explains in part how the system can exist in the membrane without compromising its ion and proton permeability barrier.  相似文献   

9.
Tat (twin arginine translocation) systems transport folded proteins across the thylakoid membrane of chloroplasts and the plasma membrane of most bacteria. Tat precursors are targeted by hydrophobic cleavable signal peptides with twin arginine (RR) motifs. Bacterial precursors possess an extended consensus, (S/T)RRXFLK, of which the two arginines and the phenylalanine are essential for efficient transport. Thylakoid Tat precursors possess twin arginines but lack the consensus phenylalanine. Here, we have characterized two stages of precursor binding to the thylakoid Tat signal peptide receptor, the 700-kDa cpTatC-Hcf106 complex. The OE17 precursor tOE17 binds to the receptor by RR-dependant electrostatic interactions and partially dissociates during blue native gel electrophoresis. In addition, the signal peptide of thylakoid-bound tOE17 is highly exposed to the membrane surface, as judged by accessibility to factor Xa of cleavage sites engineered into signal peptide flanking regions. By contrast, tOE17 containing a consensus phenylalanine in place of Val(-20) (V - 20F) binds the receptor more strongly and is completely stable during blue native gel electrophoresis. Thylakoid bound V - 20F is also completely protected from factor Xa at the identical sites. This suggests that the signal peptide is buried deeply in the cpTatC-Hcf106 binding site. We further provide evidence that the proton gradient, which is required for translocation, induces a tighter interaction between tOE17 and the cpTat machinery, similar to that exhibited by V - 20F. This implies that translocation involves a very intimate association of the signal peptide with the receptor complex binding site.  相似文献   

10.
The thylakoid Tat system employs three membrane components and the pH gradient to transport folded proteins. The translocase is signal-assembled, i.e. a receptor complex containing cpTatC and Hcf106 binds the precursor protein, and upon membrane energization, Tha4 is recruited to the precursor-receptor complex to effect translocation. We developed a two-step complementation assay to examine the implied central role of Tha4 in translocation. The first step results in the inactivation of endogenous Tha4 with specific antibodies. The second step involves integrating exogenous Tha4 and presenting the system with precursor protein. We verified this approach by confirming the results obtained recently with the Escherichia coli Tha4 ortholog TatA, i.e. that the carboxyl terminus is dispensable and the amphipathic helix essential for transport. We then investigated a conserved Tha4 transmembrane glutamate in detail. Substitution of glutamate 10 with alanine, glutamine, and even aspartate largely eliminated the ability of Tha4 to complement transport, whereas a conservative substitution elsewhere in the transmembrane domain was without effect. Chemical cross-linking assays showed that the mutated Tha4s failed to be recruited to the receptor complex under transport conditions, indicating a role for the transmembrane glutamate in translocase assembly. This assay promises an avenue into understanding the role of Tha4 in both the assembly and translocation steps of the Tat translocase.  相似文献   

11.
The thylakoidal DeltapH-dependent and bacterial twin arginine transport systems are structurally and functionally related protein export machineries. These recently discovered systems have been shown to transport folded proteins but are not known to assemble integral membrane proteins. We determined the translocation pathway of a thylakoidal FtsH homologue, plastid fusion/protein translocation factor, which is synthesized with a chloroplast-targeting peptide, a hydrophobic signal peptide, and a hydrophobic membrane anchor. The twin arginine motif in its signal peptide and its sole integration requirement of a DeltapH suggested that plastid fusion/protein translocation factor employs the DeltapH pathway. Surprisingly, changing the twin arginine to twin lysine or deleting the signal peptide did not abrogate integration capability or characteristics. Nevertheless, three criteria argue that all three forms require the DeltapH pathway for integration. First, integration was competed by an authentic DeltapH pathway precursor. Second, antibodies to DeltapH pathway component Hcf106 specifically inhibited integration. Finally, chloroplasts from the hcf106 null mutant were unable to integrate Pftf into their thylakoids. Thus, DeltapH pathway machinery facilitates both signal peptide-directed and N-tail-mediated membrane integration and does not strictly require the twin arginine motif.  相似文献   

12.
Hu CC  Tang CH  Wang JJ 《FEBS letters》2001,501(1):65-68
The thylakoid (Delta)pH-dependent pathway transports folded proteins. Identified components include Hcf106 and Tha4. Orthologs of these proteins plus a membrane protein called TatC are essential for the homologous bacterial Tat system. Here we report identification of a chloroplast TatC (cpTatC). cpTatC is an integral thylakoid membrane protein as determined by in vitro chloroplast import and immunoblotting. Antibody to cpTatC specifically inhibited the thylakoid (Delta)pH-dependent pathway in vitro. cpTatC is present in about the same quantity as estimated translocation sites, whereas Hcf106 and Tha4 are present in 5-8-fold excess. These results are relevant to mechanistic models for this system.  相似文献   

13.
The twin arginine (Tat) secretion pathway allows the translocation of folded proteins across the cytoplasmic membrane of bacteria. Tat-specific signal peptides contain a characteristic amino acid motif ((S/T)RRXFLK) including two highly conserved consecutive arginine residues that are thought to be involved in the recognition of the signal peptides by the Tat translocase. Here, we have analyzed the specificity of Tat signal peptide recognition by using a genetic approach. Replacement of the two arginine residues in a Tat-specific precursor protein by lysine-glutamine resulted in an export-defective mutant precursor that was no longer accepted by the wild-type translocase. Selection for restored export allowed for the isolation of Tat translocases possessing single mutations in either the amino-terminal domain of TatB or the first cytosolic domain of TatC. The mutant Tat translocases still efficiently accepted the unaltered precursor protein, indicating that the substrate specificity of the translocases was not strictly changed; rather, the translocases showed an increased tolerance toward variations of the amino acids occupying the positions of the twin arginine residues in the consensus motif of a Tat signal peptide.  相似文献   

14.
Thylakoid membranes have a unique complement of proteins, most of which are nuclear encoded synthesized in the cytosol, imported into the stroma and translocated into thylakoid membranes by specific thylakoid translocases. Known thylakoid translocases contain core multi-spanning, membrane-integrated subunits that are also nuclear-encoded and imported into chloroplasts before being integrated into thylakoid membranes. Thylakoid translocases play a central role in determining the composition of thylakoids, yet the manner by which the core translocase subunits are integrated into the membrane is not known. We used biochemical and genetic approaches to investigate the integration of the core subunit of the chloroplast Tat translocase, cpTatC, into thylakoid membranes. In vitro import assays show that cpTatC correctly localizes to thylakoids if imported into intact chloroplasts, but that it does not integrate into isolated thylakoids. In vitro transit peptide processing and chimeric precursor import experiments suggest that cpTatC possesses a stroma-targeting transit peptide. Import time-course and chase assays confirmed that cpTatC targets to thylakoids via a stromal intermediate, suggesting that it might integrate through one of the known thylakoid translocation pathways. However, chemical inhibitors to the cpSecA-cpSecY and cpTat pathways did not impede cpTatC localization to thylakoids when used in import assays. Analysis of membranes isolated from Arabidopsis thaliana mutants lacking cpSecY or Alb3 showed that neither is necessary for cpTatC membrane integration or assembly into the cpTat receptor complex. These data suggest the existence of another translocase, possibly one dedicated to the integration of chloroplast translocases.  相似文献   

15.
Proteins destined for the thylakoid lumen of chloroplasts must cross three membranes en route. The chloroplast twin arginine translocation (cpTat) system facilitates the transport of about one-half of all proteins that cross the thylakoid membrane in chloroplasts. Known mechanistic features of the cpTat system are drastically different from other known translocation systems, notably in its formation of a transient complex to transport fully folded proteins utilizing only the protonmotive force generated during photosynthesis for energy. However, key details, such as the structure and composition of the translocation pore, are still unknown. One of the three transmembrane cpTat components, Tha4, is thought to function as the pore by forming an oligomer. Yet, little is known about the topology of Tha4 in thylakoid, and little work has been done to detect precursor-Tha4 interactions, which are expected if Tha4 is the pore. Here, we present evidence of the interaction of the precursor with Tha4 under conditions leading to transport, using cysteine substitutions on the precursor and Tha4 and disulfide bond formation in pea (Pisum sativum). The mature domain of a transport-competent precursor interacts with the amphipathic helix and amino terminus of functional Tha4 under conditions leading to transport. Detergent solubilization of thylakoids post cross linking and blue-native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis shows that Tha4 is found in a complex containing precursor and Hcf106 (i.e. the cpTat translocase). Affinity precipitation of the cross-linked complex via Tha4 clearly demonstrates that the interaction is with full-length precursor. How these data suggest a role for Tha4 in cpTat transport is discussed.The thylakoid membrane of plant chloroplasts possesses two systems working in parallel for the transport of soluble proteins across the bilayer and into the lumen, namely the chloroplast secretory system and the chloroplast twin arginine translocation (cpTat) system (Müller and Klösgen, 2005; Cline and Theg, 2007; Cline and Dabney-Smith, 2008; Albiniak et al., 2012). For both systems, proteins destined for the thylakoid lumen are encoded by nuclear genes, cytoplasmically translated as higher molecular mass precursor proteins containing targeting sequences, and imported into the chloroplast. However, lumen-targeting sequences on precursors directed to the cpTat system contain obligate twin Arg residues on the amino-proximal side of the hydrophobic core, and the precursors are transported in folded conformations. Both systems require energy to drive the translocation process, but the cpTat system relies solely on the transmembrane potential generated by the protonmotive force (PMF) of photosynthesis, whereas the secretory system also relies on ATP hydrolysis (Cline and Theg, 2007). It is estimated that roughly one-half of the lumen proteins contain twin-Arg signal peptides (Peltier et al., 2004; Sun et al., 2004), several of which are involved in photosynthetic processes, such as the 23-kD subunit of the oxygen evolving complex of PSII (OE23; Ifuku et al., 2011), OE17 (Yi et al., 2006), and subunit T of PSII (Kapazoglou et al., 1995) and subunit N of PSI (Haldrup et al., 1999), making the cpTat system a vital pathway for higher plants.Twin arginine translocation (Tat) systems are also found in bacterial plasma membrane, and both thylakoid and bacteria serve as model systems for studies on the Tat pathway mechanism, each providing insight into different aspects of the mechanism and demonstrating important differences between the two. The cpTat machinery contains three membrane-bound components, Tha4, Hcf106, and cpTatC, with homologous proteins TatA, TatB, and TatC in bacteria, respectively. Tha4 and Hcf106 share sequence and structural homology. They both contain an N-terminal single-transmembrane region followed by a hinge region that connects to an amphipathic α-helix and a divergent C-terminal tail. However, they have distinct functions in the cpTat pathway (Sargent et al., 1999; Dabney-Smith et al., 2003). Hcf106 is largely found in complex with cpTatC, together composing the Tat receptor complex in the thylakoid that migrates as an approximately 700-kD complex by blue native (BN)-PAGE, whereas Tha4 is found as a separate homooligomeric complex of approximately 400 kD or less by BN-PAGE. cpTatC contains six transmembrane regions with the N and C termini on the stromal face of the membrane and serves as the initial receptor of the signal peptide in the receptor complex.Translocation occurs in a cyclical fashion. Precursor binds to the cpTatC-Hcf106 receptor complex in an energy-independent manner. Then, in the presence of the PMF, which mainly consists of ∆pH in isolated thylakoids, Tha4 assembles with the precursor-bound receptor complex to form the active translocase. At this point, transport occurs. After transport, Tha4 dissociates from the receptor complex, thus resetting the system for subsequent rounds of translocation (Mori et al., 1999; Cline and Mori, 2001; Mori and Cline, 2002). This regulated assembly of Tha4 and its tight correlation to transport of the precursor suggests that Tha4 has a critical role in the translocation step.Several models of the Tat translocase propose that Tha4 (TatA) serves as the protein-conducting channel. Several characteristics support this hypothesis, including a regulated assembly mechanism, the requirement for Tha4 only at the translocation step (Cline and Mori, 2001), the molar excess of Tha4 over cpTatC and Hcf106 (Mori et al., 2001; Celedon and Cline, 2012), oligomerization of Tha4 at the translocase (Dabney-Smith and Cline, 2009), and observations of channel-like structures of the Escherichia coli TatA in detergent extracts or even in vivo in E. coli cells (Gohlke et al., 2005; Sargent et al., 2006; Berthelmann et al., 2008). However, none of these studies demonstrate a direct interaction between precursor and Tha4 (TatA).Studies on the E. coli Tat system demonstrate weak cross links between TatA and precursor but did not follow the interaction during active transport, as the UV-inducible cross linking occurred after transport (Maurer et al., 2010). The question still remains how Tha4 (TatA) is directly involved in the translocation event itself. If Tha4 serves the role of protein-conducting channel, one would expect that as the precursor passes through the channel it would interact with Tha4. To test this hypothesis, we have employed an alternative cross-linking strategy involving disulfide exchange cross linking by generating Cys-containing variants of both precursor and Tha4 in pea (Pisum sativum). This method allows probing of the interactions between precursor and Tha4 in the steps immediately prior to and during the transport of precursor, unlike other cross-linking methods employed previously. Through one-to-one disulfide bond formation between single Cys residues placed throughout the mature domain of pOE17 and Tha4, we determined that Tha4 is in direct contact with full-length precursor after its binding the receptor and immediately prior to or during transport across the membrane. BN-PAGE demonstrated that Cys-substituted Tha4 was able to relocate into the approximately 700-kD complex in the presence of Cys-substituted precursor, demonstrating that direct interaction between the two occurs as part of the active translocase. Moreover, site-specific Cys mutations allow us to determine, to our knowledge for the first time, the region of Tha4 in contact with precursor during transport. How these data affect current models for protein transport by the cpTat pathway are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The twin arginine translocase (Tat) transports folded proteins of widely varying size across ionically tight membranes with only 2–3 components of machinery and the proton motive force. Tat operates by a cycle in which the receptor complex combines with the pore-forming component to assemble a new translocase for each substrate. Recent data on component and substrate organization in the receptor complex and on the structure of the pore complex inform models for translocase assembly and translocation. A translocation mechanism involving local transient bilayer rupture is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Ralstonia eutropha (formerly Alcaligenes eutrophus) TF93 is pleiotropically affected in the translocation of redox enzymes synthesized with an N-terminal signal peptide bearing a twin arginine (S/T-R-R-X-F-L-K) motif. Immunoblot analyses showed that the catalytic subunits of the membrane-bound [NiFe] hydrogenase (MBH) and the molybdenum cofactor-binding periplasmic nitrate reductase (Nap) are mislocalized to the cytoplasm and to the inner membrane, respectively. Moreover, physiological studies showed that the copper-containing nitrous oxide reductase (NosZ) was also not translocated to the periplasm in strain TF93. The cellular localization of enzymes exported by the general secretion system was unaffected. The translocation-arrested MBH and Nap proteins were enzymatically active, suggesting that twin-arginine signal peptide-dependent redox enzymes may have their cofactors inserted prior to transmembrane export. The periplasmic destination of MBH, Nap, and NosZ was restored by heterologous expression of Azotobacter chroococcum tatA mobilized into TF93. tatA encodes a bacterial Hcf106-like protein, a component of a novel protein transport system that has been characterized in thylakoids and shown to translocate folded proteins across the membrane.  相似文献   

18.
Sec secretory proteins are distinguished from cytoplasmic ones by N-terminal signal peptides with multiple roles during post-translational translocation. They contribute to preprotein targeting to the translocase by slowing down folding, binding receptors and triggering secretion. While signal peptides get cleaved after translocation, mature domains traffic further and/or fold into functional states. How signal peptides delay folding temporarily, to keep mature domains translocation-competent, remains unclear. We previously reported that the foldon landscape of the periplasmic prolyl-peptidyl isomerase is altered by its signal peptide and mature domain features. Here, we reveal that the dynamics of signal peptides and mature domains crosstalk. This involves the signal peptide’s hydrophobic helical core, the short unstructured connector to the mature domain and the flexible rheostat at the mature domain N-terminus. Through this cis mechanism the signal peptide delays the formation of early initial foldons thus altering their hierarchy and delaying mature domain folding. We propose that sequence elements outside a protein’s native core exploit their structural dynamics to influence the folding landscape.  相似文献   

19.
The twin arginine translocation (Tat) pathway transports folded proteins across the cytoplasmic membrane of bacteria. Tat signal peptides contain a consensus motif (S/T-R-R-X-F-L-K) that is thought to play a crucial role in substrate recognition by the Tat translocase. Replacement of the phenylalanine at the +2 consensus position in the signal peptide of a Tat-specific reporter protein (TorA-MalE) by aspartate blocked export of the corresponding TorA(D(+2))-MalE precursor, indicating that this mutation prevents a productive binding of the TorA(D(+2)) signal peptide to the Tat translocase. Mutations were identified in the extreme amino-terminal regions of TatB and TatC that synergistically suppressed the export defect of TorA(D(+2))-MalE when present in pairwise or triple combinations. The observed synergistic suppression activities were even more pronounced in the restoration of membrane translocation of another export-defective precursor, TorA(KQ)-MalE, in which the conserved twin arginine residues had been replaced by lysine-glutamine. Collectively, these findings indicate that the extreme amino-terminal regions of TatB and TatC cooperate tightly during recognition and productive binding of Tat-dependent precursor proteins and, furthermore, that TatB and TatC are both involved in the formation of a specific signal peptide binding site that reaches out as far as the end of the TatB transmembrane segment.  相似文献   

20.
The twin arginine translocation (TAT) system ferries folded proteins across the bacterial membrane. Proteins are directed into this system by the TAT signal peptide present at the amino terminus of the precursor protein, which contains the twin arginine residues that give the system its name. There are currently only two computational methods for the prediction of TAT translocated proteins from sequence. Both methods have limitations that make the creation of a new algorithm for TAT-translocated protein prediction desirable. We have developed TATPred, a new sequence-model method, based on a Nave-Bayesian network, for the prediction of TAT signal peptides. In this approach, a comprehensive range of models was tested to identify the most reliable and robust predictor. The best model comprised 12 residues: three residues prior to the twin arginines and the seven residues that follow them. We found a prediction sensitivity of 0.979 and a specificity of 0.942.  相似文献   

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