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1.
The fliL operon of Escherichia coli contains seven genes that are involved in the biosynthesis and functioning of the flagellar organelle. DNA sequences for the first three genes of this operon have been reported previously. A 2.2-kb PstI restriction fragment was shown to complement known mutant alleles of the fliO, fliP, fliQ, and fliR genes, the four remaining genes of the fliL operon. Four open reading frames were identified by DNA sequence analysis and correlated to their corresponding genes by complementation analysis. These genes were found to encode very hydrophobic polypeptides with molecular masses of 11.1, 26.9, 9.6, and 28.5 kDa for FliO, FliP, FliQ, and FliR, respectively. Analysis of recombinant plasmids in a T7 promoter-polymerase expression system enabled us to identify three of the four gene products. On the basis of DNA sequence analysis and in vivo protein expression, it appears that the fliP gene product is synthesized as a precursor protein with an N-terminal signal peptide of 21 amino acids. The FliP protein was homologous to proteins encoded by a DNA sequence upstream of the flaA gene of Rhizobium meliloti, to a gene involved in pathogenicity in Xanthomonas campestris pv. glycines, and to the spa24 gene of the Shigella flexneri. The latter two genes encode proteins that appear to be involved in protein translocation, suggesting that the FliP protein may have a similar function.  相似文献   

2.
Three genes from the Bacillus subtilis major che-fla operon have been cloned and sequenced. Two of the genes encode proteins that are homologous to the Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium flagellar biosynthetic proteins FliP and FliQ. The third gene, designated fliZ, encodes a 219-amino-acid protein with a predicted molecular mass of 24,872 Da. FliZ is not significantly homologous to any known proteins. Null mutants in fliP and fliZ do not have flagella; however, motility can be restored to the fliZ null mutant by expression of fliZ from a plasmid. FliZ has a conventional N-terminal signal sequence that does not direct secretion of the protein but appears to target the protein to the membrane. Two possible models of insertion of FliZ into the membrane are described.  相似文献   

3.
The cytoplasmic portion of the bacterial flagellum is thought to consist of at least two structural components: a switch complex and an export apparatus. These components seem to assemble around the MS ring complex, which is the first flagellar basal body substructure and is located in the cytoplasmic membrane. In order to elucidate the process of assembly of cytoplasmic substructures, the membrane localization of each component of the switch complex (FliG, FliM, and FliN) in various nonflagellated mutants was examined by immunoblotting. It was found that all these switch proteins require the MS ring protein FliF to associate with the cell membrane. FliG does not require FliM and FliN for this association, but FliM and FliN associate cooperatively with the membrane only through FliG. Furthermore, all three switch proteins were detected in membranes isolated from fliE, fliH, fliI, fliJ, fliO, fliP, fliQ, fliR, flhA, flhB, and flgJ mutants, indicating that the switch complex assembles on the MS ring complex without any other flagellar proteins involved in the early stage of flagellar assembly. The relationship between the switch complex and the export apparatus is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Pseudomonas putida DOT-T1E is a solvent-tolerant strain able to grow in the presence of 1% (vol/vol) toluene in the culture medium. Random mutagenesis with mini-Tn5-'phoA-Km allowed us to isolate a mutant strain (DOT-T1E-42) that formed blue colonies on Luria-Bertani medium supplemented with 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolylphosphate and that, in contrast to the wild-type strain, was unable to tolerate toluene shocks (0.3%, vol/vol). The mutant strain exhibited patterns of tolerance or sensitivity to a number of antibiotics, detergents, and chelating agents similar to those of the wild-type strain. The mutation in this strain therefore seemed to specifically affect toluene tolerance. Cloning and sequencing of the mutation revealed that the mini-Tn5-'phoA-Km was inserted within the fliP gene, which is part of the fliLMNOPQRflhBA cluster, a set of genes that encode flagellar structure components. FliP is involved in the export of flagellar proteins, and in fact, the P. putida fliP mutant was nonmotile. The finding that, after replacing the mutant allele with the wild-type one, the strain recovered the wild-type pattern of toluene tolerance and motility unequivocally assigned FliP a function in solvent resistance. An flhB knockout mutant, another gene component of the flagellar export apparatus, was also nonmotile and hypersensitive to toluene. In contrast, a nonpolar mutation at the fliL gene, which encodes a cytoplasmic membrane protein associated with the flagellar basal body, yielded a nonmotile yet toluene-resistant strain. The results are discussed regarding a possible role of the flagellar export apparatus in the transport of one or more proteins necessary for toluene tolerance in P. putida DOT-T1E to the periplasm.  相似文献   

5.
M Homma  Y Komeda  T Iino    R M Macnab 《Journal of bacteriology》1987,169(4):1493-1498
flaFIX, the structural gene for the periplasmic P ring of the flagellar basal body of Salmonella typhimurium, was cloned. Two gene products with apparent molecular weights of 38,000 and 40,000 were identified by minicell analysis. Data from pulse-chase and membrane fractionation experiments and data on the inhibitory effect of the proton ionophore carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone all indicated that the 40-kilodalton protein was a precursor form which, after export across the cytoplasmic membrane accompanied by cleavage of a signal peptide, gave rise to the mature protein in the periplasm. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the FlaFIX protein, predicted from the DNA sequence, conformed well to known signal peptide sequences. The results indicate that the P-ring protein of the basal body (unlike flagellin and possible some other external flagellar components) crosses the cytoplasmic membrane in a conventional signal peptide-dependent manner.  相似文献   

6.
Until now, identification of components of the flagellar protein export apparatus has been indirect. We have now identified these components directly by establishing whether mutants defective in putative export components could translocate export substrates across the cytoplasmic membrane into the periplasmic space. Hook-type proteins could be exported to the periplasm of rod mutants, indicating that rod protein export does not have to precede hook-type protein export and therefore that both types of proteins belong to a single export class, the rod/hook-type class, which is distinct from the filament-type class. Hook-capping protein (FlgD) and hook protein (FlgE) required FlhA, FlhB, FliH, FliI, FliO, FliP, FliQ, and FliR for their export to the periplasm. In the case of flagellin as an export substrate, because of the phenomenon of hook-to-filament switching of export specificity, it was necessary to use temperature-sensitive mutants and establish whether flagellin could be exported to the cell exterior following a shift from the permissive to the restrictive temperature. Again, FlhA, FlhB, FliH, FliI, and FliO were required for its export. No suitable temperature-sensitive fliQ or fliR mutants were available. FliP appeared not to be required for flagellin export, but we suspect that the temperature-sensitive FliP protein continued to function at the restrictive temperature if incorporated at the permissive temperature. Thus, we conclude that these eight proteins are general components of the flagellar export pathway. FliJ was necessary for export of hook-type proteins (FlgD and FlgE); we were unable to test whether FliJ is needed for export of filament-type proteins. We suspect that FliJ may be a cytoplasmic chaperone for the hook-type proteins and possibly also for FliE and the rod proteins. FlgJ was not required for the export of the hook-type proteins; again, because of lack of a suitable temperature-sensitive mutant, we were unable to test whether it was required for export of filament-type proteins. Finally, it was established that there is an interaction between the processes of outer ring assembly and of penetration of the outer membrane by the rod and nascent hook, the latter process being of course necessary for passage of export substrates into the external medium. During the brief transition stage from completion of rod assembly and initiation of hook assembly, the L ring and perhaps the capping protein FlgD can be regarded as bona fide export components, with the L ring being in a formal sense the equivalent of the outer membrane secretin structure of type III virulence factor export systems.  相似文献   

7.
Most of the structural components of the flagellum of Salmonella typhimurium are exported through a flagellum-specific pathway, which is a member of the family of type III secretory pathways. The export apparatus for this process is poorly understood. A previous study has shown that two proteins, about 23 and 26 kDa in size and of unknown genetic origin, are incorporated into the flagellar basal body at a very early stage of flagellar assembly. In the present study, we demonstrate that these basal body proteins are FliP (in its mature form after signal peptide cleavage) and FliR respectively. Both of these proteins have homologues in other type III secretion systems. By placing a FLAG epitope tag on FliR and the MS-ring protein FliF and immunoblotting isolated hook basal body complexes with anti-FLAG monoclonal antibody, we estimate (using the FLAG-tagged FliF as an internal reference) that the stoichiometry of FliR is fewer than three copies per basal body. An independent estimate of stoichiometry was made using data from an earlier quantitative radiolabelling analysis, yielding values of around four or five subunits per basal body for FliP and around one subunit per basal body for FliR. Immunoelectron microscopy using anti-FLAG antibody and gold–protein A suggests that FliR is located near the MS ring. We propose that the flagellar export apparatus contains FliP and FliR and that this apparatus is embedded in a patch of membrane in the central pore of the MS ring.  相似文献   

8.
The Type III flagellar protein export apparatus of bacteria consists of five or six membrane proteins, notably FlhA, which controls the export of other proteins and is homologous to the large family of FHIPEP export proteins. FHIPEP proteins contain a highly‐conserved cytoplasmic domain. We mutagenized the cloned Salmonella flhA gene for the 692 amino acid FlhA, changing a single, conserved amino acid in the 68‐amino acid FHIPEP region. Fifty‐two mutations at 30 positions mostly led to loss of motility and total disappearance of microscopically visible flagella, also Western blot protein/protein hybridization showed no detectable export of hook protein and flagellin. There were two exceptions: a D199A mutant strain, which produced short‐stubby flagella; and a V151L mutant strain, which did not produce flagella and excreted mainly un‐polymerized hook protein. The V151L mutant strain also exported a reduced amount of hook‐cap protein FlgD, but when grown with exogenous FlgD it produced polyhooks and polyhook‐filaments. A suppressor mutant in the cytoplasmic domain of the export apparatus membrane protein FlhB rescued export of hook‐length control protein FliK and facilitated growth of full‐length flagella. These results suggested that the FHIPEP region is part of the gate regulating substrate entry into the export apparatus pore.  相似文献   

9.
Most flagellar proteins are exported via a type III export apparatus which, in part, consists of the membrane proteins FlhA, FlhB, FliO, FliP, FliQ, and FliR and is housed within the membrane-supramembrane ring formed by FliF subunits. Salmonella FlhA is a 692-residue integral membrane protein with eight predicted transmembrane spans. Its function is not understood, but it is necessary for flagellar export. We have created mutants in which potentially important sequences were deleted. FlhA lacking the amino-terminal sequence prior to the first transmembrane span failed to complement and was dominant negative, suggesting that the sequence is required for function. Similar effects were seen in a variant lacking a highly conserved domain (FHIPEP) within a putative cytoplasmic loop. Scanning deletion analysis of the cytoplasmic domain (FlhAc) demonstrated that substantially all of FlhAc is required for efficient function. Affinity blotting showed that FlhA interacts with several other export apparatus membrane proteins. The implications of these findings are discussed, and a model of FlhA within the export apparatus is presented.  相似文献   

10.
The MS ring of the flagellar basal body of Salmonella is an integral membrane structure consisting of about 26 subunits of a 61-kDa protein, FliF. Out of many nonflagellate fliF mutants tested, three gave rise to intergenic suppressors in flagellar region II. The pseudorevertants swarmed, though poorly; this partial recovery of motile function was shown to be due to partial recovery of export function and flagellar assembly. The three parental mutants were all found to carry the same mutation, a six-base deletion corresponding to loss of Ala-174 and Ser-175 in the predicted periplasmic domain of the FliF protein. The 19 intergenic suppressors identified all lay in flhA, and they consisted of 10 independent examples at the nucleotide level or 9 at the amino acid level. Since two of the nine corresponded to different substitutions at the same amino acid position, only eight positions in the FlhA protein have given rise to suppressors. Thus, FliF-FlhA intergenic suppression is a fairly rare event. FlhA is a component of the flagellar protein export apparatus, with an integral membrane domain encompassing the N-terminal half of the sequence and a cytoplasmic C-terminal domain. All of the suppressing mutations lay within the integral membrane domain. These mutations, when placed in a wild-type fliF background, had no mutant phenotype. In the fliF mutant background, mutant FlhA was dominant, yielding a pseudorevertant phenotype. Wild-type FlhA did not exert significant negative dominance in the pseudorevertant background, indicating that it does not compete effectively with mutant FlhA for interaction with mutant FliF. Mutant FliF was partially dominant over wild-type FliF in both the wild-type and second-site FlhA backgrounds. Membrane fractionation experiments indicated that the fliF mutation, though preventing export, was mild enough to permit assembly of the MS ring itself, and also assembly of the cytoplasmic C ring onto the MS ring. The data from this study provide genetic support for a model in which at least the FlhA component of the export apparatus physically interacts with the MS ring within which it is housed.  相似文献   

11.
We have investigated the properties of the cytoplasmic domain (FlhB(C)) of the 383-amino-acid Salmonella membrane protein FlhB, a component of the type III flagellar export apparatus. FlhB, along with the hook-length control protein FliK, mediates the switching of export specificity from rod- and hook-type substrates to filament-type substrates during flagellar morphogenesis. Wild-type FlhB(C) was unstable (half-life, ca. 5 min), being specifically cleaved at Pro-270 into two polypeptides, FlhB(CN) and FlhB(CC), which retained the ability to interact with each other after cleavage. Full-length wild-type FlhB was also subject to cleavage. Coproduction of the cleavage products, FlhB(delta CC) (i.e., the N-terminal transmembrane domain FlhB(TM) plus FlhB(CN)) and FlhB(CC), resulted in restoration of both motility and flagellar protein export to an flhB mutant host, indicating that the two polypeptides were capable of productive association. Mutant FlhB proteins that can undergo switching of substrate specificity even in the absence of FliK were much more resistant to cleavage (half-lives, 20 to 60 min). The cleavage products of wild-type FlhB(C), existing as a FlhB(CN)-FlhB(CC) complex on an affinity blot membrane, bound the rod- and hook-type substrate FlgD more strongly than the filament-type substrate FliC. In contrast, the intact form of FlhB(C) (mutant or wild type) or the FlhB(CC) polypeptide alone bound FlgD and FliC to about the same extent. FlhB(CN) by itself did not bind substrates appreciably. We propose that FlhB(C) has two substrate specificity states and that a conformational change, mediated by the interaction between FlhB(CN) and FlhB(CC), is responsible for the specificity switching process. FliK itself is an export substrate; its binding properties for FlhB(C) resemble those of FlgD and do not provide any evidence for a physical interaction beyond that of the export process.  相似文献   

12.
The FlgH protein of Salmonella typhimurium, from which the outer membrane L ring of the flagellar basal body is constructed, has a consensus motif (LTG C) for lipoylation and signal peptide cleavage. We have confirmed the previous finding (M. Homma, K. Ohnishi, T. Iino, and R. M. Macnab, J. Bacteriol. 169:3617-3624, 1987) that it is synthesized in precursor form and processed to a mature form with an apparent molecular mass of ca. 25 kDa. flgH alleles with an in-frame deletion or a 3' truncation still permitted processing. The deletion permitted partial restoration of motility in complementation tests, whereas the truncation did not. Globomycin, an antibiotic which inhibits signal peptide cleavage of prolipoproteins, caused accumulation of precursor forms of FlgH. When cells transformed with a plasmid containing the flgH gene were grown in the presence of [3H]palmitate, a 25-kDa protein doublet was found to be radiolabeled; its identity as FlgH was confirmed by shifts in mobility when the internally deleted and truncated alleles of the gene were used. Hook-basal body complexes from cells grown in the presence of [3H]palmitate demonstrated that FlgH incorporated into flagellar structure was also labeled. An in-frame fusion between the leader sequence of the periplasmic protein PeIB and the mature FlgH sequence, with the putative N-terminal cysteine replaced by glycine, resulted in production of a fusion protein that was processed to its mature form. With a low-copy-number plasmid, the ability of this pelB-flgH fusion to complement a flgH mutant was poor, but with a high-copy-number plasmid, it was comparable to that of the wild type. Although lacking the N-terminal cysteine and therefore being incapable of lipoylation via a thioether linkage, the mutant protein still incorporated [3H]palmitate at low levels, perhaps through acylation of the N-terminal alpha-amino group. We conclude that FlgH is a lipoprotein and that under normal physiological conditions the lipoyl modification is necessary for FlgH to function properly as the L-ring protein of the flagellar basal body. We suggest that the N terminus of FlgH is responsible for anchoring the basal body in the outer membrane and that the C terminus may be responsible for binding to the P ring to form the L,P-ring complex.  相似文献   

13.
Pathogenic Yersinia species employ a type III secretion system (TTSS) to target antihost factors, Yop proteins, into eukaryotic cells. The secretion machinery is constituted of ca. 20 Ysc proteins, nine of which show significant homology to components of the flagellar TTSS. A key event in flagellar assembly is the switch from secreting-assembling hook substrates to filament substrates, a switch regulated by FlhB and FliK. The focus of this study is the FlhB homologue YscU, a bacterial inner membrane protein with a large cytoplasmic C-terminal domain. Our results demonstrate that low levels of YscU were required for functional Yop secretion, whereas higher levels of YscU lowered both Yop secretion and expression. Like FlhB, YscU was cleaved into a 30-kDa N-terminal and a 10-kDa C-terminal part. Expression of the latter in a wild-type strain resulted in elevated Yop secretion. The site of cleavage was at a proline residue, within the strictly conserved amino acid sequence NPTH. A YscU protein with an in-frame deletion of NPTH was cleaved at a different position and was nonfunctional with respect to Yop secretion. Variants of YscU with single substitutions in the conserved NPTH sequence--i.e., N263A, P264A, or T265A--were not cleaved but retained function in Yop secretion. Elevated expression of these YscU variants did, however, result in severe growth inhibition. From this we conclude that YscU cleavage is not a prerequisite for Yop secretion but is rather required to maintain a nontoxic fold.  相似文献   

14.
The bacterial flagellar export apparatus is required for the construction of the bacterial flagella beyond the cytoplasmic membrane. The membrane‐embedded part of the export apparatus, which consists of FlhA, FlhB, FliO, FliP, FliQ and FliR, is located in the central pore of the MS ring formed by 26 copies of FliF. The C‐terminal cytoplasmic domain of FlhA is located in the centre of the cavity within the C ring made of FliG, FliM and FliN. FlhA interacts with FliF, but its assembly mechanism remains unclear. Here, we fused yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) and cyan fluorescent protein (CFP) to the C‐termini of FliF and FlhA and investigated their subcellular localization by fluorescence microscopy. The punctate pattern of FliF–YFP localization required FliG but neither FliM, FliN, FlhA, FlhB, FliO, FliP, FliQ nor FliR. In contrast, FlhA–CFP localization required FliF, FliG, FliO, FliP, FliQ and FliR. The number of FlhA–YFP molecules associated with the MS ring was estimated to be about nine. We suggest that FlhA assembles into the export gate along with other membrane components during the MS ring complex formation in a co‐ordinated manner.  相似文献   

15.
In the gap between two closely linked flagellar gene clusters on the Escherichia coli and Salmonella typhimurium chromosomes (at about 42 to 43 min on the E. coli map), we found an open reading frame whose sequence suggested that it encoded an alpha-amylase; the deduced amino acid sequences in the two species were 87% identical. The strongest similarities to other alpha-amylases were to the excreted liquefying alpha-amylases of bacilli, with > 40% amino acid identity; the N-terminal sequence of the mature bacillar protein (after signal peptide cleavage) aligned with the N-terminal sequence of the E. coli or S. typhimurium protein (without assuming signal peptide cleavage). Minicell experiments identified the product of the E. coli gene as a 56-kDa protein, in agreement with the size predicted from the sequence. The protein was retained by spheroplasts rather than being released with the periplasmic fraction; cells transformed with plasmids containing the gene did not digest extracellular starch unless they were lysed; and the protein, when overproduced, was found in the soluble fraction. We conclude that the protein is cytoplasmic, as predicted by its sequence. The purified protein rapidly digested amylose, starch, amylopectin, and maltodextrins of size G6 or larger; it also digested glycogen, but much more slowly. It was specific for the alpha-anomeric linkage, being unable to digest cellulose. The principal products of starch digestion included maltotriose and maltotetraose as well as maltose, verifying that the protein was an alpha-amylase rather than a beta-amylase. The newly discovered gene has been named amyA. The natural physiological role of the AmyA protein is not yet evident.  相似文献   

16.
We isolated and characterized spontaneous mutants with defects in the 147-amino-acid Salmonella protein FliJ, which is a cytoplasmic component of the type III flagellar export apparatus. These mutants, including ones with null mutations, have the ability to form swarms on motility agar plates after prolonged incubation at 30 degrees C; i.e., they display a leaky motile phenotype. One mutant, SJW277, which formed significantly bigger swarms than the others, encoded only the N-terminal 73 amino acids of FliJ, one-half of the protein. At 30 degrees C, overproduction of this mutant protein improved, to wild-type levels, both motility and the ability to export both rod/hook-type (FlgD; hook capping protein) and filament-type (FliC; flagellin) substrates. At 42 degrees C, however, export was inhibited, indicating that the mutant FliJ protein was temperature sensitive. Taking advantage of this, we performed temperature upshift experiments, which demonstrated that FliJ is directly required for the export of FliC. Co-overproduction of FliJ and either of two export substrates, FliE or FlgG, hindered their aggregation in the cytoplasm. We conclude that FliJ is a general component of the flagellar export apparatus and has a chaperone-like activity for both rod/hook-type and filament-type substrates.  相似文献   

17.
Transport of flagellar structural proteins beyond the cytoplasmic membrane is accomplished by a type III secretory pathway [flagellar type III secretion system (fTTSS)]. The mechanism of substrate recognition by the fTTSS is still enigmatic. Using the hook scaffolding protein FlgD of Escherichia coli as a model substrate, it is demonstrated that the export signal is contained within the N-terminal 71 amino acids of FlgD. Analysis of frame-shift mutations and alterations of the nucleotide sequence suggest a proteinaceous nature of the signal. Furthermore, the physicochemical properties of the first about eight amino acids are crucial for export.  相似文献   

18.
During assembly of the bacterial flagellum, protein subunits that form the exterior structures are exported through a specialized secretion apparatus energized by the proton gradient. This category of protein transport, together with the similar process that occurs in the injectisomes of gram‐negative pathogens, is termed type‐III secretion. The membrane‐embedded part of the flagellar export apparatus contains five essential proteins: FlhA, FlhB, FliP, FliQ and FliR. Here, we have undertaken a variety of experiments that together support the proposal that the protein‐conducting conduit is formed primarily, and possibly entirely, by FliP. Chemical modification experiments demonstrate that positions near the center of certain FliP trans‐membrane (TM) segments are accessible to polar reagents. FliP expression sensitizes cells to a number of chemical agents, and mutations at predicted channel‐facing positions modulate this effect. Multiple assays are used to show that FliP suffices to form a channel that can conduct a variety of medium‐sized, polar molecules. Conductance properties are strongly modulated by mutations in a methionine‐rich loop that is predicted to lie at the inner mouth of the channel, which might form a gasket around cargo molecules undergoing export. The results are discussed in the framework of an hypothesis for the architecture and action of the cargo‐conducting part of the type‐III secretion apparatus.  相似文献   

19.
Calcium-activated chloride channel (CLCA) proteins were first described as a family of plasma membrane Cl(-) channels that could be activated by calcium. Genetic and electrophysiological studies have supported this view. The human CLCA2 protein is expressed as a 943-amino-acid precursor whose N-terminal signal sequence is removed followed by internal cleavage near amino acid position 680. Earlier investigations of transmembrane geometry suggested five membrane passes. However, analysis by the more recently derived simple modular architecture research tool algorithm predicts that a C-terminal 22-amino-acid hydrophobic segment comprises the only transmembrane pass. To resolve this question, we raised an antibody against hCLCA2 and investigated the synthesis, localization, maturation, and topology of the protein. Cell surface biotinylation and endoglycosidase H analysis revealed a 128-kDa precursor confined to the endoplasmic reticulum and a maturely glycosylated 141-kDa precursor at the cell surface by 48 h post-transfection. By 72 h, 109-kDa N-terminal and 35-kDa C-terminal cleavage products were detected at the cell surface but not in the endoplasmic reticulum. Surprisingly, however, the 109-kDa product was spontaneously shed into the medium or removed by acid washes, whereas the precursor and 35-kDa product were retained by the membrane. Two other CLCA family members, bCLCA2 and hCLCA1, also demonstrated preferential release of the N-terminal product. Transfer of the hCLCA2 C-terminal hydrophobic segment to a secreted form of green fluorescent protein was sufficient to target that protein to the plasma membrane. Together, these data indicate that hCLCA2 is mostly extracellular with only a single transmembrane segment followed by a short cytoplasmic tail and is itself unlikely to form a channel.  相似文献   

20.
The Tsr protein of Escherichia coli is a chemosensory transducer that mediates taxis toward serine and away from certain repellents. Like other bacterial transducers, Tsr spans the cytoplasmic membrane twice, forming a periplasmic domain of about 150 amino acids and a cytoplasmic domain of about 300 amino acids. The 32 N-terminal amino acids of Tsr resemble the consensus signal sequence of secreted proteins, but they are not removed from the mature protein. To investigate the function of this N-terminal sequence in the assembly process, we isolated translational fusions between tsr and the phoA and lacZ genes, which code for the periplasmic enzyme alkaline phosphatase and the cytoplasmic enzyme beta-galactosidase, respectively. All tsr-phoA fusions isolated code for proteins whose fusion joints are within the periplasmic loop of Tsr, and all of these hybrid proteins have high alkaline phosphatase activity. The most N-terminal fusion joint is at amino acid 19 of Tsr. Tsr-lacZ fusions were found throughout the tsr gene. The beta-galactosidase activity of the LacZ-fusion proteins varies greatly, depending on the location of the fusion joint. Fusions with low activity have fusion joints within the periplasmic loop of Tsr. The expression of these fusions is most likely reduced at the level of translation. In addition, one of these fusions markedly reduces the export and processing of the periplasmic maltose-binding protein and the outer membrane protein OmpA, but not of intact PhoA or of the outer membrane protein LamB. A temperature-sensitive secA mutation, causing defective protein secretion, stops expression of new alkaline phosphatase activity coded by a tsr-phoA fusion upon shifting to the nonpermissive temperature. The same secA mutation, even at the permissive temperature, increases the activity and the level of expression of LacZ fused to the periplasmic loop of Tsr relative to a secA+ strain. We conclude that the assembly of Tsr into the cytoplasmic membrane is mediated by the machinery responsible for the secretion of a subset of periplasmic and outer membrane proteins. Moreover, assembly of the Tsr protein seems to be closely coupled to its synthesis.  相似文献   

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