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mRNA targeting eliminates the need for the signal recognition particle during membrane protein insertion in bacteria

Authors :
Pinku Sarmah
Wenkang Shang
Andrea Origi
Mariya Licheva
Claudine Kraft
Maximilian Ulbrich
Elisabeth Lichtenberg
Annegret Wilde
Hans-Georg Koch
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

SummarySignal-sequence dependent protein targeting is essential for the spatiotemporal organization of eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells and facilitated by dedicated protein targeting factors, such as the signal recognition particle (SRP). However, targeting signals are not exclusively contained within proteins, but can also be present within mRNAs. Byin vivoandin vitroassays, we show that mRNA targeting is controlled by the nucleotide content and by secondary structures within mRNAs. mRNA binding to bacterial membranes occurs independently of soluble targeting factors, but is dependent on the SecYEG-translocon and YidC. Importantly, membrane insertion of proteins translated from membrane-bound mRNAs occurs independently of the SRP pathway, while the latter is strictly required for proteins translated from cytosolic mRNAs. In summary, our data indicate that mRNA targeting acts in parallel to the canonical SRP-dependent protein targeting and serves as an alternative strategy for safeguarding membrane protein insertion when the SRP pathway is compromised.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....44595c78629028ea4c770992bb0cef4d