Abstract

The evolutionarily conserved Sec machinery is responsible for transporting proteins across the cytoplasmic membrane. Protein substrates of the Sec machinery must be in an unfolded conformation in order to be translocated across (or inserted into) the cytoplasmic membrane. In bacteria, the requirement for unfolded proteins is strict: substrate proteins that fold (or misfold) prematurely in the cytoplasm prior to translocation become irreversibly trapped in the cytoplasm. Partially folded Sec substrate proteins and stalled ribosomes containing nascent Sec substrates can also inhibit translocation by blocking (i.e., “jamming”) the membrane-embedded Sec machinery. To avoid these issues, bacteria have evolved a complex network of quality control systems to ensure that Sec substrate proteins do not fold in the cytoplasm. This quality control network can be broken into three branches, for which we have defined the acronym “AID”: (i) avoidance of cytoplasmic intermediates through cotranslationally channeling newly synthesized Sec substrates to the Sec machinery; (ii) inhibition of folding Sec substrate proteins that transiently reside in the cytoplasm by molecular chaperones and the requirement for posttranslational modifications; (iii) destruction of products that could potentially inhibit translocation. In addition, several stress response pathways help to restore protein-folding homeostasis when environmental conditions that inhibit translocation overcome the AID quality control systems.

Highlights

  • A significant subset of proteins is localized to the cell envelope, which in the Gramnegative bacterium Escherichia coli consists of the cytoplasmic membrane, the outer membrane, and the soluble compartment sandwiched in-between known as the periplasm (Tsirigotaki et al, 2017; Cranford-Smith and Huber, 2018)

  • Protein folding presents a predicament for Sec-dependent protein translocation: Sec substrate proteins must fold at their final destination to carry out their function, but premature folding prevents their correct localization

  • We focus on the quality control network of E. coli because it is the most extensively investigated bacterial system

Read more

Summary

University of Birmingham

Document Version Publisher's PDF, also known as Version of record Citation for published version (Harvard): Jiang, C, Wynne, M & Huber, D 2021, 'How quality control systems AID Sec-dependent protein translocation', Frontiers in Molecular Bioscience, vol 8, 669376. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmolb.2021.669376

Link to publication on Research at Birmingham portal
INTRODUCTION
AVOIDANCE OF CYTOPLASMIC INTERMEDIATES THROUGH COTRANSLATIONAL TARGETING
Cotranslational Targeting to the CT Pathway
Cotranslational Targeting to the UT Pathway
Sorting to the CT and UT Pathways
Trigger Factor Delays Delivery of UT Substrate Proteins to SecYEG
INHIBITION OF PROTEIN FOLDING OF SEC SUBSTRATES IN THE CYTOPLASM
Inhibition of Folding by SecB
Inhibition of Folding by General Chaperone Systems
Posttranslational Modifications That Facilitate Protein Folding
DESTRUCTION OF PRODUCTS THAT INHIBIT PROTEIN TRANSLOCATION
Destruction of Cytoplasmic Sec Substrates by Lon Protease
Destruction of Jammed SecYEG Complexes by FtsH
Other Peptidases
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call