Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and the Groningen Biomolecular Sciences and Biotechnology Institute, University of Groningen, 9751 NN Haren, The Netherlands
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Bacterial protein translocation is mediated by translocase, a multisubunit membrane protein complex that consists of a peripheral ATPase SecA and a preprotein-conducting channel with SecY, SecE, and SecG as subunits. Like
Escherichia coli
SecG, the
Bacillus subtilis
homologue, YvaL, dramatically stimulated the ATP-dependent translocation of precursor PhoB (prePhoB) by the
B. subtilis
SecA-SecYE complex. To systematically determine the functional exchangeability of translocase subunits, all of the relevant combinations of the
E. coli
and
B. subtilis secY
,
secE
, and
secG
genes were expressed in
E. coli
. Hybrid SecYEG complexes were overexpressed at high levels. Since SecY could not be overproduced without SecE, these data indicate a stable interaction between the heterologous SecY and SecE subunits.
E. coli
SecA, but not
B. subtilis
SecA, supported efficient ATP-dependent translocation of the
E. coli
precursor OmpA (proOmpA) into inner membrane vesicles containing the hybrid SecYEG complexes, if
E. coli
SecY and either
E. coli
SecE or
E. coli
SecG were present. Translocation of
B. subtilis
prePhoB, on the other hand, showed a strict dependence on the translocase subunit composition and occurred efficiently only with the homologous translocase. In contrast to
E. coli
SecA,
B. subtilis
SecA binds the SecYEG complexes only with low affinity. These results suggest that each translocase subunit contributes in an exclusive manner to the specificity and functionality of the complex.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
26 articles.
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