Abstract
Accurate folding, assembly, localization, and maturation of newly synthesized proteins are essential to all cells and require high fidelity in the protein biogenesis machineries that mediate these processes. Here, we review our current understanding of how high fidelity is achieved in one of these processes, the cotranslational targeting of nascent membrane and secretory proteins by the signal recognition particle (SRP). Recent biochemical, biophysical, and structural studies have elucidated how the correct substrates drive a series of elaborate conformational rearrangements in the SRP and SRP receptor GTPases; these rearrangements provide effective fidelity checkpoints to reject incorrect substrates and enhance the fidelity of this essential cellular pathway. The mechanisms used by SRP to ensure fidelity share important conceptual analogies with those used by cellular machineries involved in DNA replication, transcription, and translation, and these mechanisms likely represent general principles for other complex cellular pathways. Copyright © 2014 by Annual Reviews. All rights reserved.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Zhang, X., & Shan, S. O. (2014). Fidelity of cotranslational protein targeting by the signal recognition particle. Annual Review of Biophysics, 43(1), 381–408. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-biophys-051013-022653
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.