Back to Search Start Over

The C-terminal tail of the bacterial translocation ATPase SecA modulates its activity

Authors :
Mohammed Jamshad
Bernd Bukau
Gareth W. Hughes
Günter Kramer
Fiyaz Mohammed
Kazi Fahmida Rahman
Damon Huber
Max Wynne
Douglas G. Ward
Scott A. White
Timothy J. Knowles
Source :
eLife, Vol 8 (2019), 'eLife ', vol: 8, pages: e48385-1-e48385-23 (2019), eLife
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd, 2019.

Abstract

In bacteria, the translocation of proteins across the cytoplasmic membrane by the Sec machinery requires the ATPase SecA. SecA binds ribosomes and recognises nascent substrate proteins, but the molecular mechanism of nascent substrate recognition is unknown. We investigated the role of the C-terminal tail (CTT) of SecA in nascent polypeptide recognition. The CTT consists of a flexible linker (FLD) and a small metal-binding domain (MBD). Phylogenetic analysis and ribosome binding experiments indicated that the MBD interacts with 70S ribosomes. Disruption of the MBD only or the entire CTT had opposing effects on ribosome binding, substrate-protein binding, ATPase activity and in vivo function, suggesting that the CTT influences the conformation of SecA. Site-specific crosslinking indicated that F399 in SecA contacts ribosomal protein uL29, and binding to nascent chains disrupts this interaction. Structural studies provided insight into the CTT-mediated conformational changes in SecA. Our results suggest a mechanism for nascent substrate protein recognition.

Details

ISSN :
2050084X
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
eLife
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c561585f62baa080a17a1408b64d3021