The recent discovery of a ubiquitous translocation pathway, specifically required for proteins with a twin-arginine motif in their signal peptide, has focused interest on its membrane-bound components, one of which is known as TatC. Unlike most organisms of which the genome has been sequenced completely, the Gram-positive eubacterium Bacillus subtilis contains two tatC-like genes denoted tatCd and tatCy, The corresponding TatCd and TatCy proteins have the potential to be involved in the translocation of 27 proteins with putative twin-arginine signal peptides of which ∼6-14 are likely to be secreted into the growth medium. Using a proteomic approach, we show that PhoD of B, subtilis, a phosphodiesterase belonging to a novel protein family of which all known members are synthesized with typical twin-arginine signal peptides, is secreted via the twin-arginine translocation pathway. Strikingly, TatCd is of major importance for the secretion of PhoD, whereas TatCy is not required for this process. Thus, TatC appears to be a specificity determinant for protein secretion via the Tat pathway. Based on our observations, we hypothesize that the TatC-determined pathway specificity is based on specific interactions between TatC-like proteins and other pathway components, such as TatA, of which three paralogues are present in B. subtilis.
CITATION STYLE
Jongbloed, J. D. H., Martin, U., Antelmann, H., Hecker, M., Tjalsma, H., Venema, G., … Müllere, J. (2000). TatC is a specificity determinant for protein secretion via the twin-arginine translocation pathway. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 275(52), 41350–41357. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M004887200
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