Promiscuous targeting of polytopic membrane proteins to SecYEG or YidC by theEscherichia colisignal recognition particle

Author:

Welte Thomas1,Kudva Renuka123,Kuhn Patrick12,Sturm Lukas1,Braig David1,Müller Matthias13,Warscheid Bettina24,Drepper Friedel24,Koch Hans-Georg13

Affiliation:

1. Institut für Biochemie und Molekularbiologie, Zentrum für Biochemie und Molekulare Zellforschung, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg, 79104 Freiburg, Germany

2. Fakultät für Biologie, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg, 79104 Freiburg, Germany

3. Spemann Graduiertenschule für Biologie und Medizin, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg, 79104 Freiburg, Germany

4. Zentrum für Biologische Signalstudien (BIOSS), Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg, 79104 Freiburg, Germany

Abstract

Protein insertion into the bacterial inner membrane is facilitated by SecYEG or YidC. Although SecYEG most likely constitutes the major integration site, small membrane proteins have been shown to integrate via YidC. We show that YidC can also integrate multispanning membrane proteins such as mannitol permease or TatC, which had been considered to be exclusively integrated by SecYEG. Only SecA-dependent multispanning membrane proteins strictly require SecYEG for integration, which suggests that SecA can only interact with the SecYEG translocon, but not with the YidC insertase. Targeting of multispanning membrane proteins to YidC is mediated by signal recognition particle (SRP), and we show by site-directed cross-linking that the C-terminus of YidC is in contact with SRP, the SRP receptor, and ribosomal proteins. These findings indicate that SRP recognizes membrane proteins independent of the downstream integration site and that many membrane proteins can probably use either SecYEG or YidC for integration. Because protein synthesis is much slower than protein transport, the use of YidC as an additional integration site for multispanning membrane proteins may prevent a situation in which the majority of SecYEG complexes are occupied by translating ribosomes during cotranslational insertion, impeding the translocation of secretory proteins.

Publisher

American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB)

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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