We have shown previously that the 100-residue-long periplasmic N-terminal tail of the Escherichia coli inner membrane protein ProW can be translocated across the inner membrane in a sec-independent manner and that its translocation is blocked by the introduction of three positively charged residues near its C-terminal end (Whitley, P., Zander, T., Ehrmann, M., Haardt, M., Bre-mer, E., and von Heijne, G. (1994) EMBO J. 13, 4653-4661). We have now further analyzed the requirements for translocation of the N-terminal tail and found that the introduction of even a single arginine can block translocation. Position-specific differences in the effects on translocation of arginine insertions suggest that the C-terminal end of the N-terminal tail is more critical for translocation than the central and N-terminal regions. We also show that the N-terminal tail is translocated in a truncation mutant where a stop codon is placed immediately after the first transmembrane segment, provided that the transmembrane segment is flanked on its C-terminal end by positively charged residues. Thus, sec-independent translocation of a relatively large domain can be induced by a translocation signal located at the extreme C terminus of a protein.
CITATION STYLE
Whitley, P., Gafvelin, G., & von Heijne, G. (1995). SecA-independent Translocation of the Periplasmic N-terminal Tail of an Escherichia coli Inner Membrane Protein. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 270(50), 29831–29835. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.270.50.29831
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