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1.
Bacterial protein export requires two forms of energy input, ATP and the membrane electrochemical potential. Using an in vitro reaction reconstituted with purified soluble and peripheral membrane components, we can now directly measure the translocation-coupled hydrolysis of ATP. This translocation ATPase requires inner membrane vesicles, SecA protein and translocation-competent proOmpA. The stimulatory activity of membrane vesicles can be blocked by either antibody to the SecY protein or by preparing the membranes from a secY-thermosensitive strain which had been incubated at the non-permissive temperature in vivo. The SecA protein itself has more than one ATP binding site. 8-azido-ATP inactivates SecA for proOmpA translocation and for translocation ATPase, yet does not inhibit a low level of ATP hydrolysis inherent in the isolated SecA protein. These data show that the SecA protein has a central role in coupling the hydrolysis of ATP to the transfer of pre-secretory proteins across the membrane.  相似文献   

2.
In Escherichia coli , precursor proteins are targeted to the membrane-bound translocase by the cytosolic chaperone SecB. SecB binds to the extreme carboxy-terminus of the SecA ATPase translocase subunit, and this interaction is promoted by preproteins. The mutant SecB proteins, L75Q and E77K, which interfere with preprotein translocation in vivo , are unable to stimulate in vitro translocation. Both mutants bind proOmpA but fail to support the SecA-dependent membrane binding of proOmpA because of a marked reduction in their binding affinities for SecA. The stimulatory effect of preproteins on the interaction between SecB and SecA exclusively involves the signal sequence domain of the preprotein, as it can be mimicked by a synthetic signal peptide and is not observed with a mutant preprotein (Δ8proOmpA) bearing a non-functional signal sequence. Δ8proOmpA is not translocated across wild-type membranes, but the translocation defect is suppressed in inner membrane vesicles derived from a prlA4 strain. SecB reduces the translocation of Δ8proOmpA into these vesicles and almost completely prevents translocation when, in addition, the SecB binding site on SecA is removed. These data demonstrate that efficient targeting of preproteins by SecB requires both a functional signal sequence and a SecB binding domain on SecA. It is concluded that the SecB–SecA interaction is needed to dissociate the mature preprotein domain from SecB and that binding of the signal sequence domain to SecA is required to ensure efficient transfer of the preprotein to the translocase.  相似文献   

3.
R J Cabelli  L Chen  P C Tai  D B Oliver 《Cell》1988,55(4):683-692
The soluble and membrane components of an E. coli in vitro protein translocation system prepared from a secA amber mutant, secA13[Am], contain reduced levels of SecA and are markedly defective in both the cotranslational and posttranslational translocation of OmpA and alkaline phosphatase into membrane vesicles. Moreover, the removal of SecA from soluble components prepared from a wild-type strain by passage through an anti-SecA antibody column similarly abolishes protein translocation. Translocation activity is completely restored by addition of submicrogram amounts of purified SecA protein, implying that the observed defects are solely related to loss of SecA function. Interestingly, the translocation defect can be overcome by reconstitution of SecA into SecA-depleted membranes, suggesting that SecA is an essential, membrane-associated translocation factor.  相似文献   

4.
We have previously reconstituted the soluble phase of precursor protein translocation in vitro using purified proteins (the precursor proOmpA, the chaperone SecB, and the ATPase SecA) in addition to isolated inner membrane vesicles. We now report the isolation of the SecY/E protein, the integral membrane protein component of the E. coli preprotein translocase. The SecY/E protein, reconstituted into proteoliposomes, acts together with SecA protein to support translocation of proOmpA, the precursor form of outer membrane protein A. This translocation requires ATP and is strongly stimulated by the protonmotive force. The initial rates and the extents of translocation into either native membrane vesicles or proteoliposomes with pure SecY/E are comparable. The SecY/E protein consists of SecY, SecE, and an additional polypeptide. Antiserum against SecY immunoprecipitates all three components of the SecY/E protein.  相似文献   

5.
Efficient translocation of pure precursor of PhoE protein (prePhoE) could be accomplished in an in vitro system consisting of only inverted Escherichia coli inner membrane vesicles, ATP, and SecA and SecB protein. In this in vitro system SecB and not trigger factor could stabilize a translocation-competent state of prePhoE. In contrast, translocation competency of proOmpA could be induced by both trigger factor and SecB protein, suggesting specificity in interactions between cytosolic factors and precursors in outer membrane protein translocation.  相似文献   

6.
Translocation of preproteins across the Escherichia coli inner membrane requires acidic phospholipids. We have studied the translocation of the precursor protein proOmpA across inverted inner membrane vesicles prepared from cells depleted of phosphatidylglycerol and cardiolipin. These membranes support neither translocation nor the translocation ATPase activity of the SecA subunit of preprotein translocase. We now report that inner membrane vesicles which are depleted of acidic phospholipids are unable to bind SecA protein with high affinity. These membranes can be restored to translocation competence by fusion with liposomes containing phosphatidylglycerol, suggesting that the defect in SecA binding is a direct effect of phospholipid depletion rather than a general derangement of inner membrane structure. Reconstitution of SecY/E, the membrane-embedded domain of translocase, into proteoliposomes containing predominantly a single synthetic acidic lipid, dioleoylphosphatidylglycerol, allows efficient catalysis of preprotein translocation.  相似文献   

7.
E Crooke  L Brundage  M Rice    W Wickner 《The EMBO journal》1988,7(6):1831-1835
The precursor protein proOmpA can translocate across purified Escherichia coli inner membrane vesicles in the absence of any other soluble proteins. ProOmpA, purified 2000-fold in the presence of 8 M urea, is competent for translocation following rapid renaturation via dilution. ATP, the transmembrane electrochemical potential, and functional secY protein are essential for the translocation of proOmpA renatured by dilution. The kinetics of its translocation and the level of translocation at each concentration of ATP are indistinguishable from that of proOmpA renatured by dialysis with trigger factor. After dilution, the proOmpA rapidly loses its competence for membrane assembly. However, this competence is stabilized by trigger factor. Assembly-competent proOmpA is in a protease-sensitive conformation, whereas proOmpA which has lost this competence is more resistant to degradation. This suggests that the primary role for trigger factor in in vitro protein translocation is to maintain precursor proteins in a translocation-competent conformation. We propose that a properly folded precursor protein and ATP are the only soluble components which are essential for bacterial protein translocation.  相似文献   

8.
In Escherichia coli, precursor proteins are translocated across the cytoplasmic membrane by translocase. This multisubunit enzyme consists of a preprotein-binding and ATPase domain, SecA, and the SecYEG complex as the integral membrane domain. PrlA4 is a mutant of SecY that enables the translocation of preproteins with a defective, or missing, signal sequence. Inner membranes of the prlA4 strain efficiently translocate Delta8proOmpA, a proOmpA derivative with a non-functional signal sequence. Owing to the signal sequence mutation, Delta8proOmpA binds to the translocase with a lowered affinity and the recognition is not restored by the prlA4 SecY. At the ATP-dependent initiation of translocation, the binding affinity of SecA for SecYEG is lowered causing the premature loss of bound preproteins from the translocase. The prlA4 membranes, however, bind SecA with a much higher affinity than the wild-type, and during initiation, the SecA and preprotein remain bound at the translocation site allowing an improved efficiency of translocation. It is concluded that the prlA4 strain prevents the rejection of defective preproteins from the export pathway by stabilizing SecA at the SecYEG complex.  相似文献   

9.
Diverse studies of three cytoplasmic proteins of Escherichia coli--SecB, trigger factor and GroEL--have suggested that they can maintain precursor proteins in a conformation which is competent for membrane translocation. These proteins have been termed 'chaperones'. Using purified chaperone proteins and precursor protein substrates, we find that each of these chaperones can stabilize proOmpA for translocation and for the translocation-ATPase. These chaperones bind to proOmpA to form isolable complexes. SecB and GroEL will also form complexes with another exported protein, prePhoE. In contrast, these chaperones do not form stable complexes with a variety of soluble proteins such as SecA protein, bovine serum albumin, ovalbumin or ribonuclease A. While chaperones may transiently interact with soluble proteins to catalyze their folding, the stable interaction between chaperones and presecretory proteins, maintaining an open conformation which is essential for translocation, may commit these proteins to the secretion pathway.  相似文献   

10.
K Nishiyama  S Mizushima    H Tokuda 《The EMBO journal》1993,12(9):3409-3415
A novel factor, which is a membrane component of the protein translocation machinery of Escherichia coli, was discovered. This factor was found in the trichloracetic acid-soluble fraction of solubilized cytoplasmic membrane. The factor was purified to homogeneity by ion exchange column chromatographies and found to be a hydrophobic protein with a molecular mass of approximately 12 kDa. The factor caused > 20-fold stimulation of the protein translocation when it was reconstituted into proteoliposomes together with SecE and SecY. SecE, SecY, SecA and ATP were essential for the factor-dependent stimulation of the activity. The factor stimulated the translocation of all three precursor proteins examined, including authentic proOmpA. Stimulation of the translocation of proOmpF-Lpp, a model presecretory protein, was especially remarkable, since no translocation was observed unless proteoliposomes were reconstituted with the factor. Partial amino acid sequence of the purified factor was determined. An antibody raised against a synthetic peptide of this sequence inhibited the protein translocation into everted membrane vesicles, indicating that the factor is playing an important role in protein translocation into membrane vesicles. The partial amino acid sequence was found to coincide with that deduced from the reported DNA sequence of the upstream region of the leuU gene. Cloning and sequencing of the upstream region revealed the presence of a new open reading frame, which encodes a hydrophobic protein of 11.4 kDa. We propose that the factor is a general component of the protein translocation machinery of E. coli.  相似文献   

11.
We have separately analyzed membrane-targeting and membrane translocation of an exported bacterial protein. The precursor of the outer membrane protein LamB of Escherichia coli was synthesized in vitro and translocated into inverted plasma membrane vesicles under co- and post-translational conditions. The translation/translocation products of LamB were subsequently resolved into soluble and membrane-associated material. Dissipation of the H(+)-motive force, depletion of ATP and treatment of membranes with N-ethylmaleimide each inhibited processing and translocation of preLamB without preventing its binding to the membranes. Hence, all three conditions block transmembrane passage rather than membrane-targeting. The latter was abolished by pretreatment of salt-extracted membrane vesicles with trypsin. It was also drastically reduced when preLamB was synthesized in cell extracts derived from either a secA amber or a secB null mutant. Membrane-targeting of preLamB therefore requires soluble SecA and SecB as well as a protease-sensitive membrane receptor. The finding that SecA is involved in targeting whereas ATP is required for the transmembrane passage suggests that SecA, which harbors an ATPase activity [Lill et al. (1989), EMBO J., 8, 961-966], might have a dual function in bacterial protein export.  相似文献   

12.
Y B Yang  J Lian    P C Tai 《Journal of bacteriology》1997,179(23):7386-7393
SecY, a component of the protein translocation system in Escherichia coli, was depleted at a nonpermissive temperature in a strain which had a temperature-sensitive polar effect on the expression of its secY. Membrane vesicles prepared from these cells, when grown at the nonpermissive temperature, contained about 5% SecY and similarly low levels of SecG. As expected, translocation of alkaline phosphatase precursors across these SecY-deficient membranes was severely impaired and appeared to be directly related to the decrease of SecY amounts. However, despite such a dramatic reduction in SecY and SecG levels, these membranes exhibited 50 to 70% of the wild-type translocation activity, including the processing of the signal peptide, of OmpA precursor (proOmpA). This translocation activity in SecY-deficient membranes was still SecA and ATP dependent and was not unique to proOmpA, as lipoprotein and lambda receptor protein precursors were also transported efficiently. Membranes that were reconstituted from these SecY-depleted membranes contained undetectable amounts of SecY yet were also shown to possess substantial translocation activity for proOmpA. These results indicate that the requirement of SecY for translocation is not obligatory for all secretory proteins and may depend on the nature of precursors. Consequently, it is unlikely that SecY is the essential core channel through which all precursors traverse across membranes; rather, SecY probably contributes to efficiency and specificity.  相似文献   

13.
Translocase mediates the transport of preproteins across the inner membrane of Escherichia coli. SecA binds with high affinity to the membrane-embedded protein-conducting SecYEG complex and serves as both a receptor for secretory proteins and as an ATP-driven molecular motor. Cycles of ATP binding and hydrolysis by SecA drive the progressive movement of the preprotein across the membrane. Surface plasmon resonance allows an online monitoring of protein interactions. Here we report on the kinetic analysis of the interaction between SecA and the membrane-embedded SecYEG complex. Immobilization of membrane vesicles containing overproduced SecYEG on the Biacore Pioneer L1 chip allows the detection of high affinity SecA binding to the SecYEG complex and online monitoring of the translocation of the secretory protein proOmpA. SecA binds tightly to the SecYEG.proOmpA complex and is released only upon ATP hydrolysis. The results provide direct evidence for a model in which SecA cycles at the SecYEG complex during translocation.  相似文献   

14.
Preprotein translocation in E. coli requires ATP, the membrane electrochemical potential delta mu H+, and translocase, an enzyme with an ATPase domain (SecA) and the membrane-embedded SecY/E. Studies of translocase and proOmpA binds to the SecA domain. Second, SecA binds ATP. Third, ATP-binding energy permits translocation of approximately 20 residues of proOmpA. Fourth, ATP hydrolysis releases proOmpA. ProOmpA may then rebind to SecA and reenter this cycle, allowing progress through a series of transmembrane intermediates. In the absence of delta mu H+ or association with SecA, proOmpA passes backward through the membrane, but moves forward when either ATP and SecA or a membrane electrochemical potential is supplied. However, in the presence of delta mu H+ (fifth step), proOmpA rapidly completes translocation. delta mu H(+)-driven translocation is blocked by SecA plus nonhydrolyzable ATP analogs, indicating that delta mu H+ drives translocation when ATP and proOmpA are not bound to SecA.  相似文献   

15.
The role of SecA in selecting bacterial proteins for export was examined using a heterologous system that lacks endogenous SecA and other bacterial proteins. This approach allowed us to assess the interaction of SecA with ribosome-bound photoreactive nascent chains in the absence of trigger factor, SecB, Ffh (the bacterial protein component of the signal recognition particle), and the SecYEG translocon in the bacterial plasma membrane. In the absence of membranes, SecA photocross-linked efficiently to nascent translocation substrate OmpA in ribosome-nascent chain (RNC) complexes in an interaction that was independent of both ATP and SecB. However, no photocross-linking to a nascent membrane protein that is normally targeted by a signal recognition particle was observed. Modification of the signal sequence revealed that its affinity for SecA and Ffh varied inversely. Gel filtration showed that SecA binds tightly to both translating and non-translating ribosomes. When purified SecA.RNC complexes containing nascent OmpA were exposed to inner membrane vesicles lacking functional SecA, the nascent chains were successfully targeted to SecYEG translocons. However, purified RNCs lacking SecA were unable to target to the same membranes. Taken together, these data strongly suggest that cytosolic SecA participates in the selection of proteins for export by co-translationally binding to the signal sequences of non-membrane proteins and directing those nascent chains to the translocon.  相似文献   

16.
R Lill  E Crooke  B Guthrie  W Wickner 《Cell》1988,54(7):1013-1018
Trigger factor is a soluble, 63,000 dalton protein of E. coli that stabilizes proOmpA, the precursor form of a major outer-membrane protein, in a conformation competent for in vitro membrane assembly. There is approximately one trigger factor molecule bound to each 70S ribosome isolated from cell extracts in physiological buffers. Trigger factor dissociates from ribosomes in 1.5 M LiCl and reassociates with salt-washed ribosomes in low-salt buffer. Binding is exclusively to the 50S (large) subunit, known to contain the exit domain for nascent polypeptide chains. In addition to its associations with proOmpA and ribosomes, excess trigger factor can compete with the proOmpA-trigger factor complex for a limited number of membrane sites that are essential for translocation of proOmpA. These data suggest a model of trigger factor cycling between the cytoplasm, the ribosome, presecretory proteins, and membrane receptor proteins.  相似文献   

17.
SecA protein is directly involved in protein secretion in Escherichia coli   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
A high-expression plasmid for the secA gene was constructed. The SecA protein was then overproduced in E. coli and purified. The purified SecA stimulated the in vitro translocation of a model secretory protein into inverted membrane vesicles pretreated with 4 M urea. Membrane vesicles from a secAts mutant exhibited lower translocation activity, which was enhanced by SecA. These results indicate that SecA is directly involved in protein secretion across the cytoplasmic membrane.  相似文献   

18.
Trigger factor is an abundant cytosolic protein of Escherichia coli which can stabilize proOmpA for in vitro translocation across inner membrane vesicles. The gene encoding E. coli trigger factor was isolated and sequenced, allowing construction of strains in which the expression of trigger factor is readily regulated. We found no defect in the in vivo rate of synthesis or secretion of proOmpA in trigger factor-depleted cells. The primary physiological defect in trigger factor-depleted or -overproducing cells is an enrichment of filamented cells. Filamentation of the trigger factor-overproducing strain is suppressed by a multicopy plasmid expressing the essential division gene ftsZ, suggesting that trigger factor has an important role in cell division.  相似文献   

19.
Protein translocation in Escherichia coli requires protein-conducting channels in cytoplasmic membranes to allow precursor peptides to pass through with adenosine triphosphate (ATP) hydrolysis. Here, we report a novel, sensitive method that detects the opening of the SecA-dependent protein-conducting channels at the nanogram level. E. coli inverted membrane vesicles were injected into Xenopus oocytes, and ionic currents were recorded using the two-electrode voltage clamp. Currents were observed only in the presence of E. coli SecA in conjunction with E. coli membranes. Observed currents showed outward rectification in the presence of KCl as permeable ions and were significantly enhanced by coinjection with the precursor protein proOmpA or active LamB signal peptide. Channel activity was blockable with sodium azide or adenylyl 5'-(beta,gamma-methylene)-diphosphonate, a nonhydrolyzable ATP analogue, both of which are known to inhibit SecA protein activity. Endogenous oocyte precursor proteins also stimulated ion current activity and can be inhibited by puromycin. In the presence of puromycin, exogenous proOmpA or LamB signal peptides continued to enhance ionic currents. Thus, the requirement of signal peptides and ATP hydrolysis for the SecA-dependent currents resembles biochemical protein translocation assay with E. coli membrane vesicles, indicating that the Xenopus oocyte system provides a sensitive assay to study the role of Sec and precursor proteins in the formation of protein-conducting channels using electrophysiological methods.  相似文献   

20.
Sec translocase catalyzes membrane protein insertion and translocation. We have introduced stretches of charged amino acid residues into the preprotein proOmpA and have analyzed their effect on in vitro protein translocation into Escherichia coli inner membrane vesicles. Both negatively and positively charged amino acid residues inhibit translocation of proOmpA, yielding a partially translocated polypeptide chain that blocks the translocation site and no longer activates preprotein-stimulated SecA ATPase activity. Stretches of positively charged residues are much stronger translocation inhibitors and suppressors of the preprotein-stimulated SecA ATPase activity than negatively charged residues. These results indicate that both clusters of positively and negatively charged amino acids are poor substrates for the Sec translocase and that this is reflected by their inability to stimulate the ATPase activity of SecA.  相似文献   

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