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1.
2.
Kiefer D  Kuhn A 《The EMBO journal》1999,18(22):6299-6306
Bacterial integral inner membrane proteins are either translocated across the lipid bilayer using an energy-driven enzyme, such as the Sec translocase, or they might interact directly with the membrane due to hydrophobic forces. We report that the single-spanning Pf3 coat protein is spontaneously inserted into the membrane of Escherichia coli and requires the electrical component of the membrane potential (DeltaPsi) to translocate its N-terminal region. This results in a final N(out)C(in) orientation of the protein in the cytoplasmic membrane, due the potential-driven translocation of the aspartyl residue at position 18 in the hydrophilic N-terminal tail. Uncharged protein tails are only translocated when the hydrophobic transmembrane region of the protein has been extended. An extended transmembrane anchor allows membrane insertion in the absence of an electrochemical membrane potential, but also causes the loss of a strict determination of the topology.  相似文献   

3.
The major coat protein of filamentous bacteriophage adopts its membrane-bound conformation in detergent micelles. High-resolution 1H and 15N NMR experiments are used to characterize the structure and dynamics of residues 30-40 in the hydrophobic midsection of Pf1 coat protein in sodium dodecyl sulfate micelles. Uniform and specific-site 15N labels enable the immobile backbone sites to be identified by their 1H/15N heteronuclear nuclear Overhauser effect and allow the assignment of 1H and 15N resonances. About one-third of the amide N-H protons in the protein undergo very slow exchange with solvent deuterons, which is indicative of sites in highly structured environments. The combination of results from 1H/15N heteronuclear correlation, 1H homonuclear correlation, and 1H homonuclear Overhauser effect experiments assigns the resonances to specific residues and demonstrates that residues 30-40 of the coat protein have a helical secondary structure.  相似文献   

4.
The atomic resolution structure of Pf1 coat protein determined by solid-state NMR spectroscopy of magnetically aligned filamentous bacteriophage particles in solution is compared to the structures previously determined by X-ray fiber and neutron diffraction, the structure of its membrane-bound form, and the structure of fd coat protein. These structural comparisons provide insights into several biological properties, differences between class I and class II filamentous bacteriophages, and the assembly process. The six N-terminal amino acid residues adopt an unusual "double hook" conformation on the outside of the bacteriophage particle. The solid-state NMR results indicate that at 30 degrees C, some of the coat protein subunits assume a single, fully structured conformation, and some have a few mobile residues that provide a break between two helical segments, in agreement with structural models from X-ray fiber and neutron diffraction, respectively. The atomic resolution structure determined by solid-state NMR for residues 7-14 and 18-46, which excludes the N-terminal double hook and the break between the helical segments, but encompasses more than 80% of the backbone including the distinct kink at residue 29, agrees with that determined by X-ray fiber diffraction with an RMSD value of 2.0 A. The symmetry and distance constraints determined by X-ray fiber and neutron diffraction enable the construction of an accurate model of the bacteriophage particle from the coordinates of the coat protein monomers.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract: The membrane insertion of bacteriophage coat proteins occurs independent of the Sec-translocase of Escherichia coli . Detailed study of the Pf3 and M13 coat proteins has elucidated two fundamental mechanisms of how proteins invade the membrane, most likely by direct interaction with the lipid bilayer. The Sec-independent translocation of amino-terminal regions across the inner membrane is limited to a short length and a small number of charged residues. Protein regions that contain several charged residues are efficiently translocated across the membrane when these regions are flanked by two adjacent hydrophobic segments interacting synergistically. The relevance of these findings for the membrane insertion mechanism of multispanning membrane proteins is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
During the past years, remarkable progress has been made in our understanding of the replication cycle of bacteriophage M13 and the molecular details that enable phage proteins to navigate in the complex environment of the host cell. With new developments in molecular membrane biology in combination with spectroscopic techniques, we are now in a position to ask how phages carry out this delicate process on a molecular level, and what sort of protein-lipid and protein-protein interactions are involved. In this review we will focus on the molecular details of the protein-protein and protein-lipid interactions of the major coat protein (gp8) that may play a role during the infection of Escherichia coli by bacteriophage M13.  相似文献   

7.
The association of the major coat protein of fd bacteriophage with a phospholipid bilayer was investigated by analyzing the protein's susceptibility to proteolysis and its circular dichroism spectrum when incorporated into single-walled phospholipid vesicles. In the limits tested, this association appeared to be independent of the mass ratio of protein to lipid and of vesicle size, phospholipid composition, and method of preparation. The circular dichroism data are consistent with a similar "membrane-bound" conformation for all cases of vesicle-associated coat protein and for deoxycholate micelle-associated coat protein. Proteolysis of coat protein associated with deoxycholate micelles and with phospholipid vesicles defined the central hydrophobic core presumed to represent that portion of the protein which associates with membrane bilayers in vivo. The isolated core, which assumed a predominantly beta-type conformation in detergent solution, maintained a beta conformation when associated with a vesicle phospholipid bilayer.  相似文献   

8.
A restriction fragment carrying the major coat protein gene (gene VIII) was excised from the DNA of the class I filamentous bacteriophage fd, which infects Escherichia coli. This fragment was cloned into the expression plasmid pKK223-3, where it came under the control of the tac promoter, generating plasmid pKf8P. Bacteriophage fd gene VIII was similarly cloned into the plasmid pEMBL9+, enabling it to be subjected to site-directed mutagenesis. By this means the positively charged lysine residue at position 48, one of four positively charged residues near the C terminus of the protein, was turned into a negatively charged glutamic acid residue. The mutated fd gene VIII was cloned back from the pEMBL plasmid into the expression plasmid pKK223-3, creating plasmid pKE48. In the presence of the inducer isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactoside, the wild-type and mutated coat protein genes were strongly expressed in E. coli TG1 cells transformed with plasmids pKf8P and pKE48, respectively, and the product procoat proteins underwent processing and insertion into the E. coli cell inner membrane. A net positive charge of only 2 on the side-chains in the C-terminal region is evidently sufficient for this initial stage of the virus assembly process. However, the mutated coat protein could not encapsidate the DNA of bacteriophage R252, an fd bacteriophage carrying an amber mutation in its own gene VIII, when tested on non-suppressor strains of E. coli. On the other hand, elongated hybrid bacteriophage particles could be generated whose capsids contained mixtures of wild-type (K48) and mutant (E48) subunits. This suggests that the defect in assembly may occur at the initiation rather than the elongation step(s) in virus assembly. Other mutations of lysine-48 that removed or reversed the positive charge at this position in the C-terminal region of the coat protein were also found to lead to the production of commensurately longer bacteriophage particles. Taken together, these results indicate direct electrostatic interaction between the DNA and the coat protein in the capsid and support a model of non-specific binding between DNA and coat protein subunits with a stoicheiometry that can be varied during assembly.  相似文献   

9.
Foreign DNA fragments were inserted into filamentous phage gene VIII to create hybrid B-proteins with foreign sequences in the amino terminus. The hybrid proteins are incorporated into the virions which retain viability and infectivity. Virions with hybrid B-proteins have the same contour length and the same number of B-protein molecules as virions with natural B-proteins. It was shown that for one of hybrid B-proteins the position of the processing site had changed.  相似文献   

10.
The results of molecular dynamics simulations of Pf1 coat protein are described and compared to experimental NMR data on both the membrane bound and structural forms of this viral coat protein. Molecular dynamics simulations of the 46 residue coat protein and related model sequences were performed according to a simple protocol. The simulations were initiated with the polypeptides in a completely uniform alpha helical conformation in a dielectric continuum (epsilon = 2) and the motions of individual residues were followed as a function of time by monitoring the angular fluctuations of amide NH bond vectors. The simulations of Pf1 coat protein were able to identify the same mobile and structured segments found in experimental NMR studies of the membrane bound form of the protein (Shon, K.-J., Y. Kim, L. A. Colnago, and S. J. Opella. 1991. Science (Wash. DC). 252:1303-1305). Significantly, in addition to mobile amino and carboxyl terminal regions, a mobile internal loop was found that connects the rigid hydrophobic and amphipathic helices in the protein. NMR experiments show that this mobile loop is present in both the viral and membrane bound forms of the protein and that it plays a role in viral assembly (Nambudripad, R., W. Stark, S. J. Opella, and L. Makowski. 1991. Science (Wash. DC) 252:1305-1308). The results of simulations of several alanine based 46 residue polypeptides with some of the charged residues present in the Pf1 coat protein sequence suggest that interactions between the Asp 14 and Asp 18 sidechains and the peptide backbone are responsible for the formation of the mobile loop.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
The M13 filamentous bacteriophage coat is a symmetric array of several thousand alpha-helical major coat proteins (P8) that surround the DNA core. P8 molecules initially reside in the host membrane and subsequently transition into their role as coat proteins during the phage assembly process. A comprehensive mutational analysis of the 50-residue P8 sequence revealed that only a small subset of the side-chains were necessary for efficient incorporation into a wild-type (wt) coat. In the three-dimensional structure of P8, these side-chains cluster into three functional epitopes: a hydrophobic epitope located near the N terminus and two epitopes (one hydrophobic and the other basic) located near the C terminus on opposite faces of the helix. The results support a model for assembly in which the incorporation of P8 is mediated by intermolecular interactions involving these functional epitopes. In this model, the N-terminal hydrophobic epitope docks with P8 molecules already assembled into the phage particle in the periplasm, and the basic epitope interacts with the acidic DNA backbone in the cytoplasm. These interactions could facilitate the transition of P8 from the membrane into the assembling phage, and the incorporation of a single P8 would be completed by the docking of additional P8 molecules with the second hydrophobic epitope at the C terminus. We constructed a minimized P8 that contained only nine non-Ala side-chains yet retained all three functional epitopes. The minimized P8 assembled into the wt coat almost as efficiently as wt P8, thus defining the minimum requirements for protein incorporation into the filamentous phage coat. The results suggest possible mechanisms of natural viral evolution and establish guidelines for the artificial evolution of improved coat proteins for phage display technology.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The membrane insertase YidC inserts newly synthesized proteins into the plasma membrane. While defects in YidC homologs in animals and plants cause diseases, YidC in bacteria is essential for life. Membrane insertion and assembly of ATP synthase and respiratory complexes is catalyzed by YidC. To investigate how YidC interacts with membrane-inserting proteins, we generated single cysteine mutants in YidC and in the model substrate Pf3 coat protein. The single cysteine mutants were expressed and analyzed for disulfide formation during 30 s of synthesis. The results show that the substrate contacts different YidC residues in four of the six transmembrane regions. The residues are located either in the region of the inner leaflet, in the center, as well as in the periplasmic leaflet, consistent with the hypothesis that YidC presents a hydrophobic platform for inserting membrane proteins. In a YidC mutant where most of the contacting residues were mutated to serines, YidC function was severely disturbed and no longer active in a complementation test, suggesting that the residues are important for function. In addition, a Pf3 mutant with a defect in membrane insertion was deficient to contact the periplasmic residues of YidC.  相似文献   

14.
YidC is a newly defined translocase component that mediates the insertion of proteins into the membrane bilayer. How YidC functions in the insertion process is not known. In this study, we report that the Sec-independent Pf3 coat protein requires the YidC protein specifically for the membrane translocation step. Using photocrosslinking techniques and ribosome-bound Pf3 coat derivatives with an extended carboxyl-terminal region, we found that the transmembrane region of the Pf3 coat protein physically interacts with YidC and the bacterial signal recognition particle Ffh component. We also find that in the insertion pathway, Pf3 coat interacts strongly with YidC only after its transmembrane segment is fully exposed outside the ribosome tunnel. Interaction between Pf3 coat and YidC occurs even in the absence of the proton motive force and with a Pf3 coat mutant that is defective in transmembrane insertion. Our study demonstrates that YidC can directly interact with a Sec-independent membrane protein, and the role of YidC is at the stage of folding the Pf3 protein into a transmembrane configuration.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Dynamics of fd coat protein in the bacteriophage   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The dynamics of the coat protein in fd bacteriophage are described with solid-state 15N and 2H NMR experiments. The virus particles and the coat protein subunits are immobile on the time scales of the 15N chemical shift anisotropy (10(3) Hz) and 2H quadrupole (10(6) Hz) interactions. Previously we have shown that the Trp-26 side chain is immobile, that the two Tyr and three Phe side chains undergo only rapid twofold jump motions about their C beta-C gamma bond axis [Gall, C. M., Cross, T. A., DiVerdi, J. A., & Opella, S. J. (1982) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 79, 101-105], and that most of the backbone peptide linkages are highly constrained but do undergo rapid small amplitude motions [Cross, T. A., & Opella, S. J. (1982) J. Mol. Biol. 159, 543-549] in the coat protein subunits in the virus particles. In this paper, we demonstrate that the four N-terminal residues of the coat protein subunits are highly mobile, since both backbone and side-chain sites of these residues undergo large amplitude motions that are rapid on the time scales of the solid-state NMR experiments. In addition, the dynamics of the methyl-containing aliphatic residues Ala, Leu, Val, Thr, and Met are analyzed. Large amplitude jump motions are observed in nearly all of these side chains even though, with the exception of the N-terminal residue Ala-1, their backbone peptide linkages are highly constrained. The established information about the dynamics of the structural form of fd coat protein in the virus particle is summarized qualitatively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Klenner C  Yuan J  Dalbey RE  Kuhn A 《FEBS letters》2008,582(29):3967-3972
The coat protein of bacteriophage Pf3 is inserted into the plasma membrane of Escherichia coli by the insertase YidC. To identify which of the six transmembrane regions of YidC bind the single-spanning Pf3 coat protein during membrane protein biogenesis, we used the disulfide cross-linking approach. We generated single cysteines in each of the transmembrane regions of YidC and in the center of the hydrophobic region of Pf3 coat protein. We found that the substrate Pf3 coat contacts the first and third transmembrane segment (TM) of YidC as crosslinks between these two proteins can be formed in vivo during membrane biogenesis. A detailed disulfide-mapping study revealed that one face of TM3 of YidC makes contact with the Pf3 protein.

Structured summary

MINT-6795850, MINT-6795869, MINT-6795912, MINT-6795927, MINT-6795942:
Coat protein (uniprotkb:P03623) binds (MI:0408) YidC (uniprotkb:P25714) by cross-linking studies (MI:0030)
MINT-6795898:
Coat protein (uniprotkb:P03623) binds (MI:0408) Coat protein (uniprotkb:P03623) by cross-linking studies (MI:0030)
  相似文献   

18.
The transmembrane (TM) segment of the major coat protein from Ff bacteriophage has been extensively studied as an example of dimerization in detergent and lipid bilayer systems. However, almost all the information regarding this interaction has been gained through mutagenesis studies, with little direct structural information being available. To this end solution NMR has the potential to provide new insights into structure of the dimer. In order to evaluate the utility of this approach we have studied a selectively 15N-labeled peptide containing the TM segment of MCP (MCPTM) by solution NMR. This peptide was found to give rise to detergent concentration-dependent spectra that were assigned to monomeric and dimeric forms. The standard free energy of this interaction in SDS was estimated from these spectra and found to be consistent with weak but specific dimerization. In addition, similar spectra could be obtained in β-octyl glucoside with intermolecular paramagnetic relaxation experiments demonstrating a parallel arrangement of TM helices in the dimer. In both detergents backbone chemical shift differences between monomeric and dimeric forms of MCPTM showed that the largest changes occur around its GXXXG motif. The resulting structural model is consistent with observations made for MCP mutants previously characterized in biological membranes, opening the door to detailed structural characterization of this form of MCP. These results also have general implications for the study of weakly interacting TM segments by solution NMR since the use of similar sample conditions should allow structural data to be accessed for oligomeric states from a wide range systems that undergo biologically relevant but weak associations in the membrane.  相似文献   

19.
The transmembrane (TM) segment of the major coat protein from Ff bacteriophage has been extensively studied as an example of dimerization in detergent and lipid bilayer systems. However, almost all the information regarding this interaction has been gained through mutagenesis studies, with little direct structural information being available. To this end solution NMR has the potential to provide new insights into structure of the dimer. In order to evaluate the utility of this approach we have studied a selectively 15N-labeled peptide containing the TM segment of MCP (MCPTM) by solution NMR. This peptide was found to give rise to detergent concentration-dependent spectra that were assigned to monomeric and dimeric forms. The standard free energy of this interaction in SDS was estimated from these spectra and found to be consistent with weak but specific dimerization. In addition, similar spectra could be obtained in beta-octyl glucoside with intermolecular paramagnetic relaxation experiments demonstrating a parallel arrangement of TM helices in the dimer. In both detergents backbone chemical shift differences between monomeric and dimeric forms of MCPTM showed that the largest changes occur around its GXXXG motif. The resulting structural model is consistent with observations made for MCP mutants previously characterized in biological membranes, opening the door to detailed structural characterization of this form of MCP. These results also have general implications for the study of weakly interacting TM segments by solution NMR since the use of similar sample conditions should allow structural data to be accessed for oligomeric states from a wide range systems that undergo biologically relevant but weak associations in the membrane.  相似文献   

20.
The structure of filamentous bacteriophage Pf1 has been studied using neutron diffraction from magnetically oriented gels of native and valine-deuterated phage. Neutron diffraction intensities were measured to approximately 8 A resolution along the equator and first six layer-lines, and differences due to the deuterated valine residues were apparent. Analysis of equatorial data indicate that one valine residue is located at a radius of about 13 A, three are in the hydrophobic center of the protein coat at an average of about 22 A radius, and one is near the outer surface of the virion at about 28 A radius. Analysis of the three-dimensional data was initiated using the rod model for the alpha-helices of the coat protein derived from earlier X-ray diffraction studies. This model was refined against the neutron diffraction intensities from native phage to obtain a phase set that was used to calculate a difference map between the valine-deuterated and native phage. The difference map exhibits peaks that correspond to the positions of the five valine residues in the coat protein. From the amino acid sequence and the alpha-helical conformation of the coat protein, the five valine residues can be unambiguously assigned to the difference peaks. This assignment indicates that the two alpha-helices of the coat protein are parallel to one another, connected by a short stretch of non-helical peptide. The valine positions also indicate that the helical surface lattice of the phage particle is right-handed.  相似文献   

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