Abstract

Escherichia coli lipoproteins are anchored to either the inner or outer membrane through fatty acyl chains covalently attached to an N-terminal cysteine. Aspartate at position 2 functions to retain lipoproteins in the inner membrane, although the retention is perturbed depending on the residue at position 3. We previously revealed that LolCDE and LolA play critical roles in this lipoprotein sorting. To clarify the sorting signals, the LolA-dependent release of lipoprotein derivatives having various residues at positions 2 and 3 was examined in spheroplasts. When the residue at position 3 was serine, only aspartate at position 2 caused the retention of lipoproteins in spheroplasts. We then examined the release of derivatives having aspartate at position 2 and various residues at position 3. Strong inner membrane retention occurred with a limited number of species of residues at position 3. These residues were present at position 3 of native lipoproteins having aspartate at position 2, whereas residues that inhibited the retention were not. It was also found that a strong inner membrane retention signal having residues other than aspartate at position 2 could be formed through the combination of the residues at positions 2 and 3. These results indicate that the inner membrane localization of native lipoproteins is ensured by the use of a limited number of strong inner membrane retention signals.

Highlights

  • Various bacteria possess lipoproteins, which have a lipidmodified cysteine at the N terminus

  • These results indicate that the inner membrane localization of native lipoproteins is ensured by the use of a limited number of strong inner membrane retention signals

  • When aspartate was at the N-terminal second position, lipoMalE was localized in the inner membrane, where it functioned as a maltose-binding protein, thereby enabling the mutant to grow in the presence of maltose (9)

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Summary

Introduction

Various bacteria possess lipoproteins, which have a lipidmodified cysteine at the N terminus. To clarify the sorting signals, the LolA-dependent release of lipoprotein derivatives having various residues at positions 2 and 3 was examined in spheroplasts. The Residue at Position 3 Influences the Potency of the Inner Membrane Retention Signal Asp at Position 2—Each L10P(DX) derivative was induced with 0.2% arabinose, and the inhibition of growth was examined (Fig. 2).

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