Interaction between SecA and SecYEG in Micellar Solution and Formation of the Membrane-Inserted State

Chris van der Does, Erik H. Manting, Andreas Kaufmann, Marco Lutz, and Arnold J. M. Driessen*
Department of Microbiology and Groningen Biomolecular Sciences and Biotechnology Institute, University of Groningen, Kerklaan 30, 9751 NN Haren, The Netherlands
Biochemistry, 1998, 37 (1), pp 201–210
DOI: 10.1021/bi972105t
Publication Date (Web): January 6, 1998
Copyright © 1998 American Chemical Society

 These investigations were supported by a PIONIER grant of the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (N.W.O.), and by the Life Sciences Foundation (S.L.W.) and Netherlands Foundation for Chemical Research (S.O.N.), which are subsidized by N.W.O.

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*

 For correspondence:  E-mail A.J.M.DRIESSEN@BIOL.RUG.NL; Tel. (50) 3632164; Fax (50) 3632154.

Abstract

Preprotein translocation in Escherichia coli is mediated by the translocase with SecA as peripheral ATPase and SecY, SecE, and SecG as membrane domain. To facilitate large-scale purification of the SecYEG heterotrimer, SecY was fused at its amino terminus with a hexahistidine tag and co-overexpressed with SecE and SecG. The presence of the His tag allowed purification of homogeneously pure SecYEG complex by a single anion-exchange chromatographic step starting from octyl glucoside-solubilized inner membranes. Endogenous levels of SecD and SecF copurified with the SecYEG protein. Purified SecYEG complex retained a nativelike, α-helical conformation in octyl glucoside and in micellar solution binds SecA with high affinity. In the presence of the nonhydrolyzable nucleotide analogue adenosine 5‘-(β,γ-imidotriphosphate), octyl glucoside-solubilized SecYEG is nearly as effective as the reconstituted enzyme in inducing the formation of a proteinase K-protected 30 kDa fragment of 125I-labeled SecA, while SecYEG is proteolyzed to fragments smaller than 6 kDa. These data demonstrate that the 30-kDa SecA fragment is not protected by the lipid phase nor by SecYEG but rather indicate that it represents a SecYEG- and nucleotide-induced stable conformational state of a SecA domain.

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History

  • Published In Issue January 06, 1998
  • Received August 25, 1997
    Revised Manuscript Received October 22, 1997

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