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Signal Recognition Particle Suppressor Screening Reveals the Regulation of Membrane Protein Targeting by the Translation Rate

Authors :
Dawei Zhang
Gang Fu
Zixiang Xu
Liuqun Zhao
Yanyan Cui
Xiaoping Liao
Source :
mBio, Vol 12, Iss 1 (2021), mBio
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Society for Microbiology, 2021.

Abstract

Inner membrane proteins (IMPs) are cotranslationally inserted into the inner membrane or endoplasmic reticulum by the signal recognition particle (SRP). Generally, the deletion of SRP can result in protein targeting defects in Escherichia coli.<br />The signal recognition particle (SRP) is conserved in all living organisms, and it cotranslationally delivers proteins to the inner membrane or endoplasmic reticulum. Recently, SRP loss was found not to be lethal in either the eukaryote Saccharomyces cerevisiae or the prokaryote Streptococcus mutans. In Escherichia coli, the role of SRP in mediating inner membrane protein (IMP) targeting has long been studied. However, the essentiality of SRP remains a controversial topic, partly hindered by the lack of strains in which SRP is completely absent. Here we show that the SRP was nonessential in E. coli by suppressor screening. We identified two classes of extragenic suppressors—two translation initiation factors and a ribosomal protein—all of which are involved in translation initiation. The translation rate and inner membrane proteomic analyses were combined to define the mechanism that compensates for the lack of SRP. The primary factor that contributes to the efficiency of IMP targeting is the extension of the time window for targeting by pausing the initiation of translation, which further reduces translation initiation and elongation rates. Furthermore, we found that easily predictable features in the nascent chain determine the specificity of protein targeting. Our results show why the loss of the SRP pathway does not lead to lethality. We report a new paradigm in which the time delay in translation initiation is beneficial during protein targeting in the absence of SRP.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21507511 and 21612129
Volume :
12
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
mBio
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cbf64e97ddc001964e8dda5f5d9b82d3