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The TatC component of the twin-arginine protein translocase functions as an obligate oligomer
- Source :
- Molecular Microbiology
- Publication Year :
- 2015
-
Abstract
- Summary The Tat protein export system translocates folded proteins across the bacterial cytoplasmic membrane and the plant thylakoid membrane. The Tat system in E scherichia coli is composed of TatA, TatB and TatC proteins. TatB and TatC form an oligomeric, multivalent receptor complex that binds Tat substrates, while multiple protomers of TatA assemble at substrate‐bound TatBC receptors to facilitate substrate transport. We have addressed whether oligomerisation of TatC is an absolute requirement for operation of the Tat pathway by screening for dominant negative alleles of tatC that inactivate Tat function in the presence of wild‐type tatC. Single substitutions that confer dominant negative TatC activity were localised to the periplasmic cap region. The variant TatC proteins retained the ability to interact with TatB and with a Tat substrate but were unable to support the in vivo assembly of TatA complexes. Blue‐native PAGE analysis showed that the variant TatC proteins produced smaller TatBC complexes than the wild‐type TatC protein. The substitutions did not alter disulphide crosslinking to neighbouring TatC molecules from positions in the periplasmic cap but abolished a substrate‐induced disulphide crosslink in transmembrane helix 5 of TatC. Our findings show that TatC functions as an obligate oligomer.
- Subjects :
- Receptor complex
Protein subunit
Molecular Sequence Data
Plasma protein binding
Arginine
Microbiology
Twin-arginine translocation pathway
Escherichia coli
Translocase
Amino Acid Sequence
Molecular Biology
Research Articles
biology
Escherichia coli Proteins
Membrane Transport Proteins
Periplasmic space
Transport protein
Transmembrane domain
Protein Subunits
Protein Transport
Phenotype
Biochemistry
Mutation
Periplasm
Biophysics
biology.protein
Protein Binding
Research Article
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 13652958
- Volume :
- 98
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Molecular microbiology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....5fce7db4bc8e88b48679e26220c5defa