Bacterial transmembrane proteins that lack N-terminal signal sequences

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Abstract

Tail-anchored membrane proteins (TAMPs), a class of proteins characterized by their lack of N-terminal signal sequence and Sec-independent membrane targeting, play critical roles in apoptosis, vesicle trafficking and other vital processes in eukaryotic organisms. Until recently, this class of membrane proteins has been unknown in bacteria. Here we present the results of bioinformatic analysis revealing proteins that are superficially similar to eukaryotic TAMPs in the bacterium Streptomyces coelicolor. We demonstrate that at least four of these proteins are bona fide membrane-spanning proteins capable of targeting to the membrane in the absence of their N-terminus and the C-terminal membrane-spanning domain is sufficient for membrane targeting. Several of these proteins, including a serine/threonine kinase and the SecE component of the Sec translocon, are widely conserved in bacteria. © 2011 Craney et al.

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Craney, A., Tahlan, K., Andrews, D., & Nodwell, J. (2011). Bacterial transmembrane proteins that lack N-terminal signal sequences. PLoS ONE, 6(5). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0019421

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