Type I secretion system-it takes three and a substrate

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Abstract

Type I secretion systems are widespread in Gram-negative bacteria and mediate the one-step translocation of a large variety of proteins serving for diverse purposes, including nutrient acquisition or bacterial virulence. Common to most substrates of type I secretion systems is the presence of a C-terminal secretion sequence that is not cleaved during or after translocation. Furthermore, these protein secretion nanomachineries are always composed of an ABC transporter, a membrane fusion protein, both located in the inner bacterial membrane, and a protein of the outer membrane. These three membrane proteins transiently form a 'tunnel channel' across the periplasmic space in the presence of the substrate. Here we summarize the recent findings with respect to structure, function and application of type I secretion systems.

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Kanonenberg, K., Spitz, O., Erenburg, I. N., Beer, T., & Schmitt, L. (2018, June 1). Type I secretion system-it takes three and a substrate. FEMS Microbiology Letters. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/femsle/fny094

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