Genetic evidence for a tight cooperation of TatB and TatC during productive recognition of Twin-Arginine (Tat) signal peptides in Escherichia coli

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Abstract

The twin arginine translocation (Tat) pathway transports folded proteins across the cytoplasmic membrane of bacteria. Tat signal peptides contain a consensus motif (S/T-R-R-X-F-L-K) that is thought to play a crucial role in substrate recognition by the Tat translocase. Replacement of the phenylalanine at the +2 consensus position in the signal peptide of a Tat-specific reporter protein (TorA-MalE) by aspartate blocked export of the corresponding TorA(D+2)-MalE precursor, indicating that this mutation prevents a productive binding of the TorA(D+2) signal peptide to the Tat translocase. Mutations were identified in the extreme amino-terminal regions of TatB and TatC that synergistically suppressed the export defect of TorA(D+2)-MalE when present in pairwise or triple combinations. The observed synergistic suppression activities were even more pronounced in the restoration of membrane translocation of another export-defective precursor, TorA(KQ)-MalE, in which the conserved twin arginine residues had been replaced by lysine-glutamine. Collectively, these findings indicate that the extreme amino-terminal regions of TatB and TatC cooperate tightly during recognition and productive binding of Tat-dependent precursor proteins and, furthermore, that TatB and TatC are both involved in the formation of a specific signal peptide binding site that reaches out as far as the end of the TatB transmembrane segment. © 2012 Lausberg et al.

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Lausberg, F., Fleckenstein, S., Kreutzenbeck, P., Fröbel, J., Rose, P., Müller, M., & Freudl, R. (2012). Genetic evidence for a tight cooperation of TatB and TatC during productive recognition of Twin-Arginine (Tat) signal peptides in Escherichia coli. PLoS ONE, 7(6). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0039867

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