4.8 Article

Conformational transition of Sec machinery inferred from bacterial SecYE structures

Journal

NATURE
Volume 455, Issue 7215, Pages 988-U72

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/nature07421

Keywords

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Funding

  1. SORST program
  2. CREST
  3. BIRD
  4. Global COE Program (Center of Education and Research for Advanced Genome-Based Medicine)
  5. National Project on Protein Structural and Functional Analyses
  6. NIH
  7. MEXT
  8. Mitsubishi Foundation
  9. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [20247020] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Over 30% of proteins are secreted across or integrated into membranes. Their newly synthesized forms contain either cleavable signal sequences or non- cleavable membrane anchor sequences, which direct them to the evolutionarily conserved Sec translocon (SecYEG in prokaryotes and Sec61, comprising alpha-, gamma- and beta-subunits, in eukaryotes). The translocon then functions as a protein-conducting channel(1). These processes of protein localization occur either at or after translation. In bacteria, the SecA ATPase(2,3) drives post- translational translocation. The only high- resolution structure of a translocon available so far is that for SecYE beta from the archaeon Methanococcus jannaschii(4), which lacks SecA. Here we present the 3.2- A-resolution crystal structure of the SecYE translocon from a SecA- containing organism, Thermus thermophilus. The structure, solved as a complex with an anti- SecY Fab fragment, revealed a 'pre-open' state of SecYE, in which several transmembrane helices are shifted, as compared to the previous SecYEb structure(4), to create a hydrophobic crack open to the cytoplasm. Fab and SecA bind to a common site at the tip of the cytoplasmic domain of SecY. Molecular dynamics and disulphide mapping analyses suggest that the pre- open state might represent a SecYE conformational transition that is inducible by SecA binding. Moreover, we identified a SecA - SecYE interface that comprises SecA residues originally buried inside the protein, indicating that both the channel and the motor components of the Sec machinery undergo cooperative conformational changes on formation of the functional complex.

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