Electrospray mass spectrometric investigation of the chaperone SecB

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Abstract

Electrospray ionization mass spectrometry was used to investigate the structure of the Escherichia coli chaperone protein SecB. It was determined that the N-terminal methionine of SecB has been removed and that more than half of all SecB monomers are additionally modified, most likely by acetylation of the N-terminus or a lysine. The use of gentle mass spectrometer interface conditions showed that the predominant, oligomeric form of SecB is a tetramer that is stable over a range of solution pH conditions and mass spectrometer interface heating (i.e., inlet capillary temperatures). At very high pH, SecB dimers are observed. SecB contains a region that is hypersensitive to cleavage by proteinase K and is thought to be involved in conformational changes that are crucial to the function of SecB. We identified the primary site of cleavage to be between Leu 141 and Gln 142. Fourteen amino acids are removed, but the truncated form remains a tetramer with stability similar to that of the intact form.

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Smith, V. F., Schwartz, B. L., Randall, L. L., & Smith, R. D. (1996). Electrospray mass spectrometric investigation of the chaperone SecB. Protein Science, 5(3), 488–494. https://doi.org/10.1002/pro.5560050310

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