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Predominant membrane localization is an essential feature of the bacterial signal recognition particle receptor

BACKGROUND: The signal recognition particle (SRP) receptor plays a vital role in co-translational protein targeting, because it connects the soluble SRP-ribosome-nascent chain complex (SRP-RNCs) to the membrane bound Sec translocon. The eukaryotic SRP receptor (SR) is a heterodimeric protein complex...

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Autores principales: Mircheva, Miryana, Boy, Diana, Weiche, Benjamin, Hucke, Friederike, Graumann, Peter, Koch, Hans-Georg
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2780400/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19912622
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1741-7007-7-76
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author Mircheva, Miryana
Boy, Diana
Weiche, Benjamin
Hucke, Friederike
Graumann, Peter
Koch, Hans-Georg
author_facet Mircheva, Miryana
Boy, Diana
Weiche, Benjamin
Hucke, Friederike
Graumann, Peter
Koch, Hans-Georg
author_sort Mircheva, Miryana
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The signal recognition particle (SRP) receptor plays a vital role in co-translational protein targeting, because it connects the soluble SRP-ribosome-nascent chain complex (SRP-RNCs) to the membrane bound Sec translocon. The eukaryotic SRP receptor (SR) is a heterodimeric protein complex, consisting of two unrelated GTPases. The SRβ subunit is an integral membrane protein, which tethers the SRP-interacting SRα subunit permanently to the endoplasmic reticulum membrane. The prokaryotic SR lacks the SRβ subunit and consists of only the SRα homologue FtsY. Strikingly, although FtsY requires membrane contact for functionality, cell fractionation studies have localized FtsY predominantly to the cytosolic fraction of Escherichia coli. So far, the exact function of the soluble SR in E. coli is unknown, but it has been suggested that, in contrast to eukaryotes, the prokaryotic SR might bind SRP-RNCs already in the cytosol and only then initiates membrane targeting. RESULTS: In the current study we have determined the contribution of soluble FtsY to co-translational targeting in vitro and have re-analysed the localization of FtsY in vivo by fluorescence microscopy. Our data show that FtsY can bind to SRP-ribosome nascent chains (RNCs) in the absence of membranes. However, these soluble FtsY-SRP-RNC complexes are not efficiently targeted to the membrane. In contrast, we observed effective targeting of SRP-RNCs to membrane-bond FtsY. These data show that soluble FtsY does not contribute significantly to cotranslational targeting in E. coli. In agreement with this observation, our in vivo analyses of FtsY localization in bacterial cells by fluorescence microscopy revealed that the vast majority of FtsY was localized to the inner membrane and that soluble FtsY constituted only a negligible species in vivo. CONCLUSION: The exact function of the SRP receptor (SR) in bacteria has so far been enigmatic. Our data show that the bacterial SR is almost exclusively membrane-bound in vivo, indicating that the presence of a soluble SR is probably an artefact of cell fractionation. Thus, co-translational targeting in bacteria does not involve the formation of a soluble SR-signal recognition particle (SRP)-ribosome nascent chain (RNC) intermediate but requires membrane contact of FtsY for efficient SRP-RNC recruitment.
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spelling pubmed-27804002009-11-21 Predominant membrane localization is an essential feature of the bacterial signal recognition particle receptor Mircheva, Miryana Boy, Diana Weiche, Benjamin Hucke, Friederike Graumann, Peter Koch, Hans-Georg BMC Biol Research article BACKGROUND: The signal recognition particle (SRP) receptor plays a vital role in co-translational protein targeting, because it connects the soluble SRP-ribosome-nascent chain complex (SRP-RNCs) to the membrane bound Sec translocon. The eukaryotic SRP receptor (SR) is a heterodimeric protein complex, consisting of two unrelated GTPases. The SRβ subunit is an integral membrane protein, which tethers the SRP-interacting SRα subunit permanently to the endoplasmic reticulum membrane. The prokaryotic SR lacks the SRβ subunit and consists of only the SRα homologue FtsY. Strikingly, although FtsY requires membrane contact for functionality, cell fractionation studies have localized FtsY predominantly to the cytosolic fraction of Escherichia coli. So far, the exact function of the soluble SR in E. coli is unknown, but it has been suggested that, in contrast to eukaryotes, the prokaryotic SR might bind SRP-RNCs already in the cytosol and only then initiates membrane targeting. RESULTS: In the current study we have determined the contribution of soluble FtsY to co-translational targeting in vitro and have re-analysed the localization of FtsY in vivo by fluorescence microscopy. Our data show that FtsY can bind to SRP-ribosome nascent chains (RNCs) in the absence of membranes. However, these soluble FtsY-SRP-RNC complexes are not efficiently targeted to the membrane. In contrast, we observed effective targeting of SRP-RNCs to membrane-bond FtsY. These data show that soluble FtsY does not contribute significantly to cotranslational targeting in E. coli. In agreement with this observation, our in vivo analyses of FtsY localization in bacterial cells by fluorescence microscopy revealed that the vast majority of FtsY was localized to the inner membrane and that soluble FtsY constituted only a negligible species in vivo. CONCLUSION: The exact function of the SRP receptor (SR) in bacteria has so far been enigmatic. Our data show that the bacterial SR is almost exclusively membrane-bound in vivo, indicating that the presence of a soluble SR is probably an artefact of cell fractionation. Thus, co-translational targeting in bacteria does not involve the formation of a soluble SR-signal recognition particle (SRP)-ribosome nascent chain (RNC) intermediate but requires membrane contact of FtsY for efficient SRP-RNC recruitment. BioMed Central 2009-11-13 /pmc/articles/PMC2780400/ /pubmed/19912622 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1741-7007-7-76 Text en Copyright ©2009 Mircheva et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research article
Mircheva, Miryana
Boy, Diana
Weiche, Benjamin
Hucke, Friederike
Graumann, Peter
Koch, Hans-Georg
Predominant membrane localization is an essential feature of the bacterial signal recognition particle receptor
title Predominant membrane localization is an essential feature of the bacterial signal recognition particle receptor
title_full Predominant membrane localization is an essential feature of the bacterial signal recognition particle receptor
title_fullStr Predominant membrane localization is an essential feature of the bacterial signal recognition particle receptor
title_full_unstemmed Predominant membrane localization is an essential feature of the bacterial signal recognition particle receptor
title_short Predominant membrane localization is an essential feature of the bacterial signal recognition particle receptor
title_sort predominant membrane localization is an essential feature of the bacterial signal recognition particle receptor
topic Research article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2780400/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19912622
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1741-7007-7-76
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