首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
P. D. Riggs  A. I. Derman    J. Beckwith 《Genetics》1988,118(4):571-579
It was shown previously that the secA gene of Escherichia coli is derepressed in cells that have a defect in protein export. Here it is demonstrated that the beta-galactosidase produced by a secA-lacZ gene fusion strain is regulated in the same way. Studies on the fusion strain reveal that the promoter or a site involved in regulation of the secA gene is located considerably upstream from the structural gene. The properties of the fusion strain provide a new selection for mutants that are defective in protein export. Selection for increased lac expression of a secA-lacZ fusion strain yields mutations in three of the known sec genes, secA, secD and prlA/secY. In addition, mutations in several genes not previously known to affect secA expression were obtained. A mutation in one of these genes causes a pleiotropic defect in protein export and a cold-sensitive growth defect; this gene, which maps at approximately 90 min on the bacterial chromosome, has been named secE.  相似文献   

2.
Characterization of cold-sensitive secY mutants of Escherichia coli.   总被引:10,自引:2,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
Mutations which cause poor growth at a low temperature, which affect aspects of protein secretion, and which map in or around secY (prlA) were characterized. The prlA1012 mutant, previously shown to suppress a secA mutation, proved to have a wild-type secY gene, indicating that this mutation cannot be taken as genetic evidence for the secA-secY interaction. Two cold-sensitive mutants, the secY39 and secY40 mutants, which had been selected by their ability to enhance secA expression, contained single-amino-acid alterations in the same cytoplasmic domain of the SecY protein. Protein export in vivo was partially slowed down by the secY39 mutation at 37 to 39 degrees C, and the retardation was immediately and strikingly enhanced upon exposure to nonpermissive temperatures (15 to 23 degrees C). The rate of posttranslational translocation of the precursor to the OmpA protein (pro-OmpA protein) into wild-type membrane vesicles in vitro was only slightly affected by reaction temperatures ranging from 37 to 15 degrees C, and about 65% of OmpA was eventually sequestered at both temperatures. Membrane vesicles from the secY39 mutant were much less active in supporting pro-OmpA translocation even at 37 degrees C, at which about 20% sequestration was attained. At 15 degrees C, the activity of the mutant membrane decreased further. The rapid temperature response in vivo and the impaired in vitro translocation activity at low temperatures with the secY39 mutant support the notion that SecY, a membrane-embedded secretion factor, participates in protein translocation across the bacterial cytoplasmic membrane.  相似文献   

3.
4.
The Escherichia coli gene secY (pr1A) codes for an integral membrane protein that plays an essential role in protein export. We previously isolated cold-sensitive mutations (ssy) as extragenic suppressors of temperature-sensitive secY24 mutation. Now we show that the ssyG class of mutations are within infB coding for the translation initiation factor IF2. The mutants produce altered forms of IF2 with a cold-sensitive in vitro activity to form a translation initiation complex. The mutation suppresses not only secY24 but also other secretion-defective mutations such as secA51 and rp10215. The beta-galactosidase enzyme activity of the MalE-LacZ 72-47 hybrid protein is strikingly reduced in the ssyG mutant at the permissive high temperature, while the hybrid protein itself is normally synthesized. This effect, which was observed only for the hybrid protein with a functional signal sequence, may result from some alteration in the cellular localization of the protein. These results suggest that IF2 or the translation initiation step can modulate protein export reactions. The isolation of cold-sensitive ssyG mutations in infB provides genetic evidence that IF2 is indeed essential for normal growth of E. coli cells.  相似文献   

5.
K Ito  Y Hirota    Y Akiyama 《Journal of bacteriology》1989,171(3):1742-1743
Phenotypes of secY and secA temperature-sensitive mutants at permissive (low) temperature have been examined. The secY24 mutant was found to be extremely susceptible to export inhibition by a basal-level synthesis of the MalE-LacZ 72-47 hybrid protein or to overproduction of a normal secretory protein such as maltose-binding protein or beta-lactamase. Comparison of this phenotype of secY24 with those of the secY100 and secA51 mutants under similar conditions suggested that MalE-LacZ protein and overproduced secretory protein do not nonspecifically enhance the partial secretion defect but act synergistically with secY24 to inhibit protein export.  相似文献   

6.
The spc operon of Escherichia coli encodes 11 ribosomal proteins and SecY. The secY gene and downstream rpmJ encoding a ribosomal protein, L36, are located distal to the promoter of the spc operon. It has been suggested that the stability of SecY mRNA depends on rpmJ unless a rho-independent terminator is inserted immediately downstream of secY. Moreover, it has been suggested that RpmJ is dispensable for E. coli. We constructed rpmJ null strains, AY101 (DeltarpmJ::tetA) and AY201 (DeltarpmJ::cat), by replacing rpmJ with tetA, which encodes a membrane protein responsible for tetracycline-resistance, and cat, which encodes a cytoplasmic chloramphenicol acetyltransferase, respectively. Depletion of RpmJ did not inhibit protein synthesis, whereas the growth of AY101 was defective at high temperatures. The level of SecY mRNA decreased significantly in both disruptants even though the rho-independent terminator was inserted immediately downstream of secY. Some periplasmic proteins were missing in the disruptants with a concomitant increase in the amount of phage shock protein in the inner membrane. These phenotypes caused by the rpmJ null mutation were corrected by a plasmid carrying secY, but not by one carrying rpmJ.  相似文献   

7.
We have examined the effects of thermosensitive mutations in secA and secY (prlA) genes on the export of proteins to the three layers of the Escherichia coli cell surface. After several hours at the nonpermissive temperature, the export of two major outer membrane proteins, lipoprotein and OmpA, is delayed, then essentially blocked, in either a secA or secY strain. These mutations also have a strong effect on the export of several proteins, such as maltose binding protein, to the periplasm, though the export of many periplasmic proteins is not affected. secA and secY block the assembly of leader peptidase, which is made without a leader sequence, into the inner membrane. However, the membrane assembly of M13 coat protein (an inner membrane protein made with an amino-terminal leader sequence) is not affected. Thus, the requirement for sec function for export does not correlate with the presence or absence of leader peptide or with a particular subcellular compartment, but rather is specific to each particular protein.  相似文献   

8.
SecA protein synthesis levels were elevated 10- to 20-fold when protein secretion was blocked in secA, secD, and secY mutants or in a malE-lacZ fusion-containing strain but not in a secB null mutant. An active secB gene product was not required to derepress secA, since SecA levels were elevated during protein export blocks in secB secY and secB malE-lacZ double mutants.  相似文献   

9.
The suhB gene is located at 55 min on the Escherichia coli chromosome and encodes a protein of 268 amino acids. Mutant alleles of suhB have been isolated as extragenic suppressors for the protein secretion mutation (secY24), the heat shock response mutation (rpoH15), and the DNA synthesis mutation (dnaB121) (K. Shiba, K. Ito, and T. Yura, J. Bacteriol. 160:696-701, 1984; R. Yano, H. Nagai, K. Shiba, and T. Yura, J. Bacteriol. 172:2124-2130, 1990; S. Chang, D. Ng, L. Baird, and C. Georgopoulos, J. Biol. Chem. 266:3654-3660, 1991). These mutant alleles of suhB cause cold-sensitive cell growth, indicating that the suhB gene is essential at low temperatures. Little work has been done, however, to elucidate the role of the product of suhB in a normal cell and the suppression mechanisms of the suhB mutations in the aforementioned mutants. The sequence similarity shared between the suhB gene product and mammalian inositol monophosphatase has prompted us to test the inositol monophosphatase activity of the suhB gene product. We report here that the purified SuhB protein showed inositol monophosphatase activity. The kinetic parameters of SuhB inositol monophosphatase (Km = 0.071 mM; Vmax = 12.3 mumol/min per mg) are similar to those of mammalian inositol monophosphatase. The ssyA3 and suhB2 mutations, which were isolated as extragenic suppressors for secY24 and rpoH15, respectively, had a DNA insertion at the 5' proximal region of the suhB gene, and the amount of SuhB protein within mutant cells decreased. The possible role of suhB in E. coli is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
The export of lipoprotein has been found to be affected in both secA and secY mutants of Escherichia coli which are defective in the secretion of a number of outer membrane and periplasmic proteins. The kinetics of accumulation of prolipoprotein upon a temperature shift to 42 degrees C is indistinguishable from that of pre-OmpA protein accumulation in the secA mutant. In both secA and secY mutants, the accumulated prolipoprotein is unmodified with glyceride and localized in the cytoplasmic membrane. We conclude from these results that the early steps in protein export are common to prolipoprotein and non-lipoprotein precursors. The pathways for the export of these two groups of precursor proteins diverge with regard to the modification and processing reactions which are late events in the export process.  相似文献   

11.
The translocation of proteins across the bacterial cell membrane is carried out by highly conserved components of the Sec system. Most bacterial species have a single copy of the genes encoding SecA and SecY, which are essential for viability. However, Streptococcus gordonii strain M99 encodes SecA and SecY homologues that are not required for viability or for the translocation of most exported proteins. The genes (secA2 and secY2) reside in a region of the chromosome required for the export of GspB, a 286 kDa cell wall-anchored protein. Loss of GspB surface expression is associated with a significant reduction in the binding of M99 to human platelets, suggesting that it may be an adhesin. Genetic analyses indicate that M99 has a second, canonical SecA homologue that is essential for viability. At least two other Gram-positive species, Streptococcus pneumoniae and Staphylococcus aureus, encode two sets of SecA and SecY homologues. One set is more similar to SecA and SecY of Escherichia coli, whereas the other set is more similar to SecA2 and SecY2 of strain M99. The conserved organization of genes in the secY2-secA2 loci suggests that, in each of these Gram-positive species, SecA2 and SecY2 may constitute a specialized system for the transport of a very large serine-rich repeat protein.  相似文献   

12.
13.
G Matsumoto  T Yoshihisa    K Ito 《The EMBO journal》1997,16(21):6384-6393
SecA, the preprotein-driving ATPase in Escherichia coli, was shown previously to insert deeply into the plasma membrane in the presence of ATP and a preprotein; this movement of SecA was proposed to be mechanistically coupled with preprotein translocation. We now address the role played by SecY, the central subunit of the membrane-embedded heterotrimeric complex, in the SecA insertion reaction. We identified a secY mutation (secY205), affecting the most carboxyterminal cytoplasmic domain, that did not allow ATP and preprotein-dependent productive SecA insertion, while allowing idling insertion without the preprotein. Thus, the secY205 mutation might affect the SecYEG 'channel' structure in accepting the preprotein-SecA complex or its opening by the complex. We isolated secA mutations that allele-specifically suppressed the secY205 translocation defect in vivo. One mutant protein, SecA36, with an amino acid alteration near the high-affinity ATP-binding site, was purified and suppressed the in vitro translocation defect of the inverted membrane vesicles carrying the SecY205 protein. The SecA36 protein could also insert into the mutant membrane vesicles in vitro. These results provide genetic evidence that SecA and SecY specifically interact, and show that SecY plays an essential role in insertion of SecA in response to a preprotein and ATP and suggest that SecA drives protein translocation by inserting into the membrane in vivo.  相似文献   

14.
To find factors participating in protein translocation in yeast, we screened a yeast genomic library for genes which, when introduced into Escherichia coli, suppressed secY24, a temperature sensitive mutation of an essential integral membrane protein (SecY) required for protein export. We isolated and characterized a gene (YSY6) which improved the translocation of the OmpA protein in mutant strain IQ85(secY24). It could also suppress another mutant [rplO215(Am)], in which the level of expression of the SecY protein is decreased at high-temperature. The YSY6 gene encodes a small amphiphilic peptide consisting of 65 amino acids, which can be expressed in E. coli cells.  相似文献   

15.
The IRA1 gene is a negative regulator of the RAS-cyclic AMP pathway in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. To identify other genes involved in this pathway, we screened yeast genomic DNA libraries for genes that can suppress the heat shock sensitivity of the ira1 mutation on a multicopy vector. We identified IRA2, encoding a protein of 3,079 amino acids, that is 45% identical to the IRA1 protein. The region homologous between the IRA1 protein and ras GTPase-activating protein is also conserved in IRA2. IRA2 maps 11 centimorgans distal to the arg1 locus on the left arm of chromosome XV and was found to be allelic to glc4. Disruption of the IRA2 gene resulted in (i) increased sensitivity to heat shock and nitrogen starvation, (ii) sporulation defects, and (iii) suppression of the lethality of the cdc25 mutant. Analysis of disruption mutants of IRA1 and IRA2 indicated that IRA1 and IRA2 proteins additively regulate the RAS-cyclic AMP pathway in a negative fashion. Expression of the IRA2 domain homologous with GAP is sufficient for complementation of the heat shock sensitivity of ira2, suggesting that IRA down regulates RAS activity by stimulating the GTPase activity of RAS proteins.  相似文献   

16.
The prc gene, which is involved in cleavage of the C-terminal peptide from the precursor form of penicillin-binding protein 3 (PBP 3) of Escherichia coli, was cloned and mapped at 40.4 min on the chromosome. The gene product was identified as a protein of about 80 kDa in maxicell and in vitro systems. Fractionation of the maxicells producing the product suggested that the product was associated with the periplasmic side of the cytoplasmic membrane. This was consistent with the notion that the C-terminal processing of PBP 3 probably occurs outside the cytoplasmic membrane: the processing was found to be dependent on the secY and secA functions, indicating that the prc product or PBP 3 or both share the translocation machinery with other extracytoplasmic proteins. DNA sequencing analysis of the prc gene region identified an open reading frame, with two possible translational starts 6 bp apart from each other, that could code for a product with a calculated molecular weight of 76,667 or 76,432. The prc mutant was sensitive to thermal and osmotic stresses. Southern analysis of the chromosomal DNA of the mutant unexpectedly revealed that the mutation was a deletion of the entire prc gene and thus that the prc gene is conditionally dispensable. The mutation resulted in greatly reduced heat shock response at low osmolarity and in leakage of periplasmic proteins.  相似文献   

17.
A multicopy suppressor of the cold-sensitive secG null mutation was isolated. The suppressor contained sfa and yccL, the former of which has been reported to be a multicopy suppressor of the fabA6 mutation carried by a temperature-sensitive unsaturated fatty acid auxotroph. Subcloning of the suppressor gene revealed that yccL, renamed gnsA (secG null mutant suppressor), was responsible for the suppression of both the secG null mutation and the fabA6 mutation. In contrast, the sfa gene did not suppress the fabA6 mutation. The ydfY (gnsB) gene, encoding a protein which is highly similar to GnsA, also suppressed both the secG null mutation and the fabA6 mutation. Although both gnsA and gnsB are linked to cold shock genes, the levels of GnsA and GnsB did not exhibit a cold shock response. A gnsA-gnsB double null mutant grew normally under all conditions examined; thus, the in vivo functions of gnsA and gnsB remain unresolved. However, overexpression of gnsA and gnsB stimulated proOmpA translocation of the secG null mutant at low temperature and caused a significant increase in the unsaturated fatty acid content of phospholipids. Taken together, these results suggest that an increase in membrane fluidity due to the increase in unsaturated fatty acids compensates for the absence of the SecG function, especially at low temperature.  相似文献   

18.
We previously reported (Shiba et al., J. Bacteriol. 160:696-701, 1984) the isolation and characterization of the mutation (ssy) that suppresses the protein export defect due to the secY24(Ts) mutation and causes cold-sensitive growth of Escherichia coli. This report describes more systematic isolation of ssy mutations. Among temperature-resistant revertants of the secY24 mutant, 65 mutants were found to be cold sensitive. These cold-sensitive mutations have been classified by genetic mapping. Twenty-two mutations fell into the ssyA class previously described. The remaining mutations were located at five new loci: ssyB at 9.5 min between tsx and lon; ssyD around 3 min; ssyE at 72.5 min near secY; ssyF at 20.5 min within rpsA; and ssyG at 69.0 min near argG. Two predominant classes, ssyA and ssyB, are probably affected in protein synthesis at the elongation step, whereas the ssyF mutant contained an altered form of ribosomal protein S1 (the gene product of rpsA). These cold-sensitive ssy mutations which suppress secY24 may define genes whose function is somehow involved in the secY-dependent protein secretion mechanism. However, the existence of multiple suppressor loci makes it unlikely that all of these genes specify additional components of the export machinery. A delicate balance may exist between the systems for synthesizing and exporting proteins.  相似文献   

19.
We previously described a dominant negative secY -d 1 allele in Escherichia coli, whose product interferes with protein export, presumably by sequestering SecE, the stabilizing partner of SecY. Syd is the product of a multicopy suppressor of the secY -d 1 phenotype, and its overproduction preferentially stabilizes the wild-type SecY protein. In contrast, overproduction of Syd is toxic to the secY24 mutant, which shows a partial defect in SecY-SecE interaction. We isolated Syd-resistant revertants from the secY24 mutant. Pseudo-reversions mapped to sites at or near the secY24 mutation site (Gly240→Asp). The secY249 mutation (Ala249→Val) intragenically suppressed Syd sensitivity, but not the temperature-sensitive Sec phenotype of the secY24 mutation. The SecY249 mutant protein shows a reduced capacity to be stabilized by Syd, suggesting that the mutation weakens the SecY-Syd interaction. The other two mutations changed residue 240 (the site of the secY24 alteration) to Asn (secY245) or Ala (secY241) and restored the ability of the cell to export protein. Although the secY245 mutant retained some sensitivity?to Syd overproduction, the secY241 mutant was completely Syd-resistant. Furthermore, the secY241 mutation seemed to represent a “hyper reversion” with respect to the SecY-SecE interaction. Protein export in this mutant was no longer sensitive to SecY-d1. When the secY -d 1 mutation was combined intragenically with secY241, the resulting double mutant gene (secY -d 1–241) showed an increased ability to interfere with protein export. On the basis of our model for SecY-d1, these results suggest that the secY241 alteration enhances SecY-SecE interaction. These results indicate that residue 240 of SecY is crucial for the interaction between the cytosolic domains of SecY and SecE required for the establishment of the translocase complex.  相似文献   

20.
Mutations previously designated prlD were described that suppressed malE signal sequence mutations and were located in the vicinity of the secA gene on the Escherichia coli chromosome. In this study, we demonstrated that four such independently isolated prlD mutations represented three unique single-base substitutions in secA, resulting in alterations at residues 111, 373, and 488 of the 901-residue SecA protein. Heretofore, the only mutations that had been described for secA were located early in the gene and resulted in a general protein export defect. Insertion mutations in the cloned gene X-secA operon that reduced or eliminated suppression by a prlD mutation also have been obtained. The properties of these suppressor and insertion mutations provide some insight into the role of SecA in the protein export process.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号