25 research outputs found

    The Active Protein-conducting Channel of Escherichia coli Contains an Apolar Patch

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    Protein translocation across the cytoplasmic membrane of Escherichia coli is mediated by translocase, a complex of a protein-conducting channel, SecYEG, and a peripheral motor domain, SecA. SecYEG has been proposed to constitute an aqueous path for proteins to pass the membrane in an unfolded state. To probe the solvation state of the active channel, the polarity sensitive fluorophore N-((2-(iodoacetoxy)ethyl)-N-methyl)amino-7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazole was introduced at specific positions in the C-terminal region of the secretory protein proOmpA. Fluorescence measurements with defined proOmpA-DHFR translocation intermediates indicate mostly a water-exposed environment with a hydrophobic region in the center of the channel.

    Stability and proton-permeability of liposomes composed of archaeal tetraether lipids

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    Liposomes composed of tetraether lipids originating from the thermoacidophilic archaeon Sulfolobus acidocaldarius were analyzed for their stability and proton permeability from 20 degrees C up to 80 degrees C. At room temperature, these liposomes are considerably more stable and have a much lower proton permeability than liposomes composed of diester lipids originating from the mesophilic bacterium Escherichia coli or the thermophilic bacterium Bacillus stearothermophilus. With increasing temperature, the stability decreased and the proton permeability increased for all liposomes. Liposomes composed from tetraether lipids, however, remain the most stable. These data suggest these liposomes retain the rigidity of the cytoplasmic membrane of S. acidocaldarius needed to endure extreme environmental growth conditions.</p

    Substitution of a conserved aspartate allows cation-induced polymerization of FtsZ

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    The prokaryotic tubulin homologue FtsZ polymerizes in vitro in a nucleotide dependent fashion. Here we report that replacement of the strictly conserved Asp212 residue of Escherichia coli FtsZ by a Cys or Asn, but not by a Glu residue results in FtsZ that polymerizes with divalent cations in the absence of added GTP. FtsZ D212C and D212N mutants copurify with GTP as bound nucleotide, providing an explanation for the unusual phenotype. We conclude that D212 plays a critical role in the coordination of a metal ion and the nucleotide at the interface of two FtsZ monomers.

    LmrR-mediated gene regulation of multidrug resistance in Lactococcus lactis

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    Multidrug resistance (MDR) in Lactococcus lactis is due to the expression of the membrane ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter LmrCD. In the absence of drugs, the transcriptional regulator LmrR prevents expression of the lmrCD operon by binding to its operator site. Through an autoregulatory mechanism LmrR also suppresses its own expression. Although the lmrR and lmrCD genes have their own promoters, primer extension analysis showed the presence of a long transcript spanning the entire lmrR–lmrCD cluster, in addition to various shorter transcripts harbouring the lmrCD genes only. ‘In-gel’ Cu-phenanthroline footprinting analysis indicated an extensive interaction between LmrR and the lmrR promoter/operator region. Atomic force microscopy imaging of the binding of LmrR to the control region of lmrR DNA showed severe deformations indicative of DNA wrapping and looping, while LmrR binding to a fragment containing the lmrCD control region induced DNA bending. The results further suggest a drug-dependent regulation mechanism in which the lmrCD genes are co-transcribed with lmrR as a polycistronic messenger. This leads to an LmrR-mediated regulation of lmrCD expression that is exerted from two different locations and by distinct regulatory mechanisms.

    Domain Interactions of the Peripheral Preprotein Translocase Subunit SecA

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    The homodimeric SecA protein is the peripheral subunit of the preprotein translocase in bacteria. It binds the preprotein and promotes its translocation across the bacterial cytoplasmic membrane by nucleotide modulated coinsertion and deinsertion into the membrane. SecA has two essential nucleotide binding sites (NBS): The high-affinity NBS-I resides in the amino-terminal domain of the protein, and the low-affinity NBS-II is localized at 2/3 of the protein sequence. The nucleotide-bound states of soluble SecA were studied by site directed tryptophan fluorescence spectroscopy, tryptic digestion, differential scanning calorimetry, and dynamic light scattering. A nucleotide-induced conformational change of a carboxy-terminal domain of SecA was revealed by Trp fluorescence spectroscopy. The Trp fluorescence of a single Trp SecA mutant containing Trp775 decreased and increased upon the addition of NBS-I saturating concentrations of ADP or AMP-PNP, respectively. DSC measurements revealed that SecA unfolds as a two domain protein. Binding of ADP to NBS-I increased the interaction between the two domains whereas binding of AMP-PNP did not influence this interaction. When both NBS-I and NBS-II are bound by ADP, SecA seems to have a more compact globular conformation whereas binding of AMP-PNP seems to cause a more extended conformation. It is suggested that the compact ADP-bound conformation resembles the membrane deinserted state of SecA, while the more extended ATP-bound conformation may correspond to the membrane inserted form of SecA.
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