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Journal of Bacteriology, June 2004, p . 3960-3969, Vol . 186,
No . 12
Mutational Analysis of Transmembrane Regions 3 and 4 of SecY, a Central
Component of Protein Translocase
Hiroyuki Mori, Naomi Shimokawa, Yasunari Satoh, and Koreaki Ito*
Institute for Virus Research, Kyoto University, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 606-8507,
Japan
Received 9 December 2003/ Accepted 16 March 2004
The SecYEG heterotrimeric membrane protein complex functions as a
channel for protein translocation across the Escherichia coli
cytoplasmic membrane . SecY is the central subunit of the SecYEG
complex and contains 10 transmembrane segments (TM1 to TM10) .
Previous mutation studies suggested that TM3 and TM4 are particularly
important for SecY function . To further characterize TM3 and TM4, we
introduced a series of cysteine-scanning mutations into these
segments . With one exception (an unstable product), all the mutant
proteins complemented the cold-sensitive growth defect of the
secY39 mutant . A combination of this secY mutation and the
secG deletion resulted in synthetic lethality, and the TM3 and
TM4 SecY cysteine substitution mutations were examined for their
ability to complement this lethality . Although they were all positive
for complementation, some of the complemented cells exhibited
significant retardation of protein export . The substitution-sensitive
residues in TM3 can be aligned to one side of the alpha-helix, and
those in TM4 revealed a tendency for residues closer to the cytosolic
side of the membrane to be more severely affected . Disulfide
cross-linking experiments identified a specific contact point for TM3
and SecG TM2 as well as for TM4 and SecG TM1 . Thus, although TM3 and
TM4 do not contain any single residue that is absolutely required,
they include functionally important helix surfaces and specific
contact points with SecG . These results are discussed in light of the
structural information available for the SecY complex .
A major pathway of protein translocation across the Escherichia
coli plasma membrane is mediated by Sec translocase . Among the
membrane-embedded Sec components, SecY and SecE are the principal
factors that are thought to constitute a channel-like pathway in the
membrane for transport of preproteins (15) . These proteins
are essential for viability of E . coli . In addition, SecG
takes part in the fully active SecYEG membrane-integrated complex .
SecY has 10 transmembrane segments (TM1 to TM10), 6 cytoplasmic
regions (C1 to C6), and 5 periplasmic regions (P1 to P5) (1) .
It interacts independently with SecE and SecG (7) . SecE
has three TMs with the cytoplasmic amino terminus and the periplasmic
carboxy-terminal tail (21) . SecG has two TMs (TM1 and
TM2) with both termini facing the periplasm (18)
and assists in the SecA insertion-deinsertion reaction cycles (9,
24) presumably through its remarkable property of
undergoing topology inversion (18) . Although SecG
is dispensable for cell growth at least at higher temperatures, it is
required for maximum translocase function in vivo and in vitro,
especially at low temperatures or in the absence of the proton motive
force (6) .
Subunit interactions within the SecYEG complex have been studied
in considerable detail . Genetic studies by Baba et al . (3)
indicated that the C4 region of SecY is important for SecY-SecE
interaction, and cross-linking studies showed that some C4 and C5
residues are indeed physically close to the conserved cytosolic
region of SecE (20) . In addition, SecY and SecE
interact via their transmembrane regions as well (8,
30, 31) . Site-specific cross-linking
experiments identified a C2-TM3-P2-TM4-C3 segment of SecY as an
interface with SecG (19, 29), a conclusion
that was also supported by genetic suppression analysis (19) .
Although TM regions might be important for transmembrane substrate
transport and its regulation in SecYEG, their roles have not been
sufficiently studied . We replaced the central six amino acid residues
of each TM of SecY with unrelated sequences and suggested that the
TM3 and TM4 regions are particularly important for SecY function
along with TM2, TM7, and TM10 (22) . In the present
study, we attempted to elucidate further the roles of TM3 and TM4
amino acid residues in the translocation-facilitating function of
SecY, with special reference to the previous implication that they
are involved in interaction with SecG . We thus constructed a series
of SecY derivatives having a single cysteine substitution in the TM3
and TM4 segments . Their complementation phenotypes and abilities to
form a disulfide-bonded complex with appropriately engineered SecG
proteins are described . In this way, we identified functionally
important helix surfaces of TM3 and TM4 and specific contact points
between the SecY and SecG TM regions .
Media and transduction. Minimal medium M9 was prepared as
described previously (23) . L medium contained 10 g
of Bacto Tryptone per liter, 5 g of yeast extract per liter, and 5 g
of NaCl per liter . P1 transduction was performed by the standard
procedures (11) . Introduction of
secG
was confirmed by PCR amplification with appropriate primers .
Bacterial strains. E . coli K-12 strain MC4100
[F– araD139
(argF-lac)U169
rpsL150 relA1 flbB5301 deoC1 ptsF25 rbsR] was described by Silhavy
et al . (23) . Its derivative, GN31 (secY39) (10)
carrying pSTD343 (lacIq; constructed and provided
by Y . Akiyama) was used for complementation tests of SecY
derivatives . KN370 ( secG::kan)
was described previously (17) . THE453 (C600 recD1009
secG::kan
zha203::Tn10; our laboratory stock) was used as a donor strain
in P1 transduction of the zha203::Tn10 and
secG
markers . Strain SA101 (MC4100 ompT::kan
secG::kan
zha203::Tn10) was described previously (19) .
Construction of plasmids encoding SecY variants having
single-cysteine substitutions in TM3 and TM4. We first constructed a
plasmid encoding cysteine-less SecY-His6-Myc . A 1.1-kbp
DNA fragment corresponding to the C-terminal
80%
of cysteine-less SecY was amplified from pAJ51 (19)
with a primer, 5'-TTCTATCTTTGCTCTGG-3', corresponding to nucleotides
281 to 297 of secY and the primer 5'-ACTTCTCGGGCGACGGATCCTCGGCCGTAGCC-3'
(the underlined BamHI recognition sequence was designed such
that a Ser codon substituted for the secY stop codon to allow
continued translation into the his6-myc tag sequence) . The
amplified fragment was introduced into pNA3 (12,
22), carrying secY+-his6-myc,
after digestion with SmaI and BamHI . This plasmid was named
pHM459, into which two unique restriction sites, KpnI and NheI, were
introduced at the positions corresponding to Gly58-Thr59 and
Ala75-Ser76 of SecY, respectively, without amino acid substitutions,
using the QuikChange method (Stratagene) . The resulting plasmid,
named pHM462, was used as template for QuikChange introduction of the
TM3 and TM4 cysteine substitutions . To avoid fortuitous mutations,
the NheI-SmaI TM3 fragment and the SmaI-HindIII TM4 fragment were
confirmed for their sequences and cloned back into unmutagenized
pHM462 . The final plasmids are summarized in Table 1 .
| TABLE 1 . Plasmids used in this study
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Construction of plasmids encoding SecG variants having single-cysteine
substitutions in TM1 and TM2. Plasmid pTYE100 encoded SecE and SecG
under the control of the tac promoter (13) .
QuikChange site-directed mutations were introduced into its secG
region to construct plasmids encoding SecG variants having
single-cysteine substitutions in the TM regions, as listed in Table
1 .
Protein export measurement. Export of a periplasmic protein,
maltose-binding protein (MBP), was examined by pulse-labeling cells
with [35S]methionine and immunoprecipitating labeled MBP
species, which were separated by sodium dodecyl
sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) into the
precursor and mature forms (13) . Radioactive
proteins were visualized and quantified by a Fuji BAS1800 phosphorimager .
Export efficiency was assessed from the proportion of the processed
mature form in the labeled MBP molecules .
Immunoblotting. Intracellular accumulation of SecY and SecG
was examined by subjecting whole-cell proteins from a fixed number of
cells, as estimated from the culture turbidity, to SDS-PAGE and
visualization by immunoblotting using appropriate antibodies and Fuji
LAS1000 luminescent image analyzer . All the details were described
previously (13) .
AMS modification. Cells of GN31 (secY39) carrying
pSTD343 (lacIq) and an additional single-cysteine
SecY plasmid were grown at 37°C in M9 minimal medium containing
glycerol and amino acids supplemented with maltose (0.4%) and
isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactoside (IPTG, 1 mM) . A
portion of an early-exponential-phase culture was then treated with
4-acetamido-4'-maleimidylstilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid (AMS) (3 mM)
at 37°C for 30 min or not treated with AMS . Subsequently, samples
were divided into two portions, one of which was pulse-labeled for 30
s and processed for MBP export assessment as described above . Another
portion was used to determine whether the SecY derivative was
susceptible to further modification with O-(2-maleimidoethyl)-O'-methyl-polyethylene
glycol 5,000 (Mal-PEG) . For the latter assay, cultures were directly
treated with trichloroacetic acid (final concentration, 5%) . After
acetone washing, protein precipitates were solubilized with 1% SDS
containing 2 mM Tris (2-carboxyethyl) phosphine hydrochloride without
or with 5 mM Mal-PEG . Samples were incubated at room temperature
for 30 min and then at 37°C for 30 min . Proteins were separated
by SDS-PAGE and visualized by anti-Myc immunoblotting as described
above .
Disulfide cross-linking. Preparations of crude membranes
were used for disulfide cross-linking experiments . Cells of SA101
carrying an appropriate combination of SecY and SecEG plasmids were
grown at 37°C in L medium containing appropriate antibiotics,
harvested, and converted into spheroplasts as described previously (19) .
They were resuspended in a solution containing 10% (wt/vol) sucrose,
3 mM EDTA (pH 7.0), 1 mM dithiothreitol, and 0.1 mM
phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride and disrupted by sonication at 4°C .
After clarification of unbroken cells by low-speed centrifugation
(18,500 x g for 10 min at
4°C), crude membrane materials containing the outer and inner
membranes were isolated by ultracentrifugation (125,000
x g for 30 min at 4°C) and
resuspended in 50 mM HEPES-KOH (pH 7.2)-20% glycerol . Disulfide
oxidation was performed essentially by the method of Veenendaal et
al . (30) . Membrane suspensions in 50 mM HEPES-KOH
(pH 7.2)-20% glycerol were mixed with 1/10 volume of a solution
containing 10 mM CuSO4 and 30 mM o-phenanthroline
and incubated for 30 min at the indicated temperature . The reaction
was terminated with 10 mM neocuproine . Subsequently, trichloroacetic
acid (final concentration, 5%) was added to precipitate proteins,
which were collected by centrifugation, washed with acetone, and
dissolved in 1.5% SDS-100 mM Tris-HCl (pH 9.0)-5 mM EDTA-15 mM
iodoacetamide by agitating at room temperature for 30 min . Samples
were subjected to SDS-PAGE, under reducing or nonreducing conditions .
SecY and SecG, as well as their covalent complexes, were detected by
immunoblotting using antibodies against the Myc epitope and against
SecG .
Cysteine-scanning mutation analysis of TM3 and TM4. Results of
our TM substitution experiments suggested that TM3 and TM4 regions of
SecY are important for the function of SecY (22),
whereas site-specific cross-linking identified the C2-TM3-P2-TM4-C3
region of SecY as a part of the interface with SecG (18) . To
elucidate the functional importance of each amino acid residue
of TM3 and TM4, we introduced cysteine substitution mutations into
these regions (Fig . 1) . The parental plasmid for mutagenesis
carried a cysteine-less version of SecY-His6-Myc, which
accumulated stably in the cell (data not shown) and retained full
biological activity (Fig . 2, column 16) .
Altogether, 44 single-cysteine variants (24 TM3 substitutions and 20
TM4 substitutions) were constructed (Fig . 1 and
Table 1) .
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FIG . 1 . SecY and SecG residues that were subjected to cysteine
substitution mutation . SecY and SecG amino acid sequences are shown
according to their topology models (1,
18) . The two cysteine residues of SecY (black squares) were
converted to alanine as indicated by the arrows . Single-cysteine
mutations were then introduced into residues shown by circles with a
black background . SecG residues that were converted to cysteine are
similarly shown.
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FIG . 2 . Abilities of single-cysteine SecY derivatives to complement the
secY39 defect . Plasmids encoding single-cysteine SecY derivatives
as specified by the positions (indicated by residue numbers) of
substitution were introduced into strain GN31 (secY39) . For
growth tests (top), cells were grown in L broth at 37°C until mid-log
phase and diluted serially (10–1 to 10–3 as
indicated) with 0.9% NaCl; 2-µl portions of each suspension were spotted
onto L-agar plates, which were incubated at 37°C for 12 h (data not
shown) as well as at 20°C for 48 h (photographs) . For protein export
assay, the same set of bacterial cells was grown at 37°C in M9 minimal
medium containing glycerol and amino acids supplemented with maltose
(0.4%) and IPTG (1 mM) until early log phase . Thirty minutes after the
temperature was shifted to 20°C, cells were pulse-labeled with [35S]methionine
for 1 min followed by immunoprecipitation of MBP, SDS-PAGE, and
phosphorimaging visualization of the labeled MBP species . The positions
of the precursor (p) and mature (m) forms of MBP are indicated . The
proportions (% export) of the mature form are shown below the
electrophoretic patterns . The Cys position mutated in SecY is shown at
the bottom of the figure . Vec, vector.
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The mutant secY plasmids thus constructed were introduced into
a secY39 mutant, a cold-sensitive mutant (2,
13), to test their ability to complement this SecY
defect (2, 14) . Immunoblotting
experiments demonstrated that all the single-cysteine SecY variants
accumulated stably in the cell, except for SecY(Arg121Cys) that had a
decreased (by
20%)
cellular abundance (data not shown) . Whereas the plating efficiency
of the secY39 mutants decreased more than 1,000-fold at 20°C,
the nonpermissive temperature (Fig . 2, column 17) (22),
38 of the mutant forms of SecY fully rescued the growth defect (the
data for only some of the mutants are shown in Fig . 2) .
The plating efficiencies of variants with Ile135Cys (column 4),
Gly167Cys (column 8), Trp173Cys (column 12), Gly175Cys (column 14),
and Glu176Cys (column 15) substitutions were slightly lower than
normal ( 1/10) .
The plasmid expressing the unstable Arg121Cys variant was still less
potent in complementation (Fig . 2, column 1) .
The complemented mutant cells were examined for their protein
export activities by pulse-labeling MBP . Without a complementing
secY plasmid, only 20 to 30% of MBP was labeled as the mature
form at 20°C by a 1-min pulse-labeling with [35S]methionine
(Fig . 2, lane 17) . This value was increased to more than
80% by introduction of any plasmid with a single cysteine
substitution of SecY, except for Arg121Cys (73% mature form [Fig.
2, lane 1]) and Leu135Cys (77% mature form [Fig.
2, lane 4]) .
Complementation tests in the absence of SecG. Although the
above complementation tests indicated that none of the TM3-TM4
cysteine substitution mutants lost SecY function, these tests may not
have been sensitive enough to report a relatively minor defect . Since
a secY deletion mutant is not available and introducing the
mutations from plasmids into the chromosome could be time-consuming
and/or impossible (22), we used a more convenient
but sensitive genetic test . SecG is required for optimal functioning
of the SecYE complex but is actually dispensable, its deletion being
associated with a cold-sensitive phenotype in certain genetic
backgrounds .
We found that the secY39 and
secG::Kanr
mutations are synthetically lethal . Thus, in P1 transduction
experiments using a donor strain having two closely linked mutations
(zha203::Tn10 and
secG::Kanr)
and a recipient secY39 strain, no Kanr marker was
cotransduced with the selective marker, Tetr (Tn10) .
In contrast, about 80% of Tetr transductants received the
Kanr marker when the recipient strain had been
complemented with a secY+ or secG+ plasmid .
Indeed, the normal cotransduction frequency between these markers
is
80% .
To examine whether the mutant SecY plasmids can complement the
secY39
secG
lethality, they were introduced into the secY39 strain, and
the resulting plasmid-bearing mutant cells were used as recipients
for Tetr transductant selection at 37°C . Although the
SecY(Arg121Cys) plasmid did not allow cotransduction of
secG::kan,
all the others did so . The complemented double mutants were still
cold sensitive due to the
secG::kan
mutation . Pulse-labeling at 20°C showed that export of MBP was
retarded more in the double mutant cells that were complemented with
some of the mutant SecYs than those complemented with others .
The less active SecY variants contained one of the Gly123Cys,
Gln131Cys, and Ile135Cys alterations in TM3 and one of the Leu164Cys,
Thr168Cys, Phe170Cys, Leu171Cys, Leu174Cys, and Gly175Cys alterations
in TM4 (Fig . 3) .
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FIG . 3 . Protein export activities of the secY39
secG
cells complemented with single-cysteine SecY derivatives . (A) Profiles
of pulse-labeled MBP . The
secG::kan
mutation was introduced by P1 transduction into strain GN31 (secY39)
carrying plasmid pSTD343 (lacIq) as well as a plasmid
encoding the cysteine-less SecY-His6-Myc (lanes 23 and 44) or
one of the single-cysteine SecY derivatives with substitutions in TM3
and TM4 at the residues indicated below the blots by residue numbers .
Cells were grown at 37°C in M9 minimal medium containing glycerol, amino
acids, maltose (0.4%), and IPTG (1 mM) until early log phase . The
temperature of a portion of the culture was then shifted to 20°C for 30
min, and then the culture was pulse-labeled with [35S]methionine
for 1 min . MBP was immunoprecipitated and separated into the precursor
(p) and mature (m) forms . Labeled MBP molecules were visualized by
phosphorimaging . (B and C) Graphical representations of the MBP export
activities as a function of the mutation locations . The proportions of
the labeled mature form of MBP (MBP export) are plotted against the
mutation positions as indicated by amino acid residue numbers in TM3 (B)
and TM4 (C).
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The extents of MBP export in the complemented double mutant strains,
as indicated by signal sequence processing, were plotted against the
positions of the cysteine substitutions for TM3 (Fig .
3B) and TM4 (Fig . 3C) . Interestingly, periodic changes
in export proficiency were noted for both sets of the mutations .
The pattern obtained for TM3 showed several minima that were
separated by three or four amino acid residues (Fig . 3B) . For
TM4, protein export proficiency appeared to decrease gradually
as the alterations approached the cytosolic side of the TM segment .
The cysteine substitution-sensitive residues in TM3 and TM4 tended to
be localized to one side of each alpha-helix (28)
(see Discussion) . These helix surfaces might be functionally
important, especially in the absence of SecG .
The importance of residues Gly123, Gln131, and Ile135 was also
studied in the secG+ cells by combining two of them (Table
1) . It was noted that a Gly123Cys-Ile135Cys
combination resulted in poor growth (Fig . 2, column
6) and a retardation of MBP export (Fig . 2, lane
6) . Another double mutant with the Gly123Cys-Gln131Cys combination
also exhibited a slight export defect (data not shown) . Thus, the
residues that face the "functional" side of the TM3 helix are
important even in the presence of SecG .
Extracellular effects of a sulfhydryl alkylating agent on protein
export. Only very limited information is available about the
functioning of the SecY amino acid residues located in the
periplasmic side . We made use of the TM3 single-cysteine derivatives
to partially address this question . Mutant cells with an engineered
cysteine residue in the region between residues 134 to 141, the
periplasmic half of TM3, were treated with 3 mM AMS, a
membrane-impermeable thiol modifier (27), at 37°C
for 30 min . Subsequently, cells were pulse-labeled with [35S]methionine
for 30 s, and MBP was immunoprecipitated (Fig . 4A;
data not shown for Gly134Cys, Ile135Cys, and Ala136Cys) . Among those
tested, SecY(Gly138Cys) and SecY(Leu139Cys) were inhibited by AMS
(Fig . 4A, lanes 2 and 3) . The MBP processing
efficiencies of SecY(Gly138Cys) and SecY(Leu139Cys) were decreased
from more than 90% to 50 and 73%, respectively .
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FIG . 4 . (A) Effects of AMS treatment of intact cells on protein export
activity . Cells of strain GN31 (secY39) carrying plasmid pSTD343
(lacIq) as well as a plasmid encoding a TM3
single-cysteine SecY derivative (lanes 1 to 5 [Cys substitution
positions shown at the bottom of panel A]), cysteine-less SecY-His6-Myc
(lane 6), or vector (Vec) (lane 7) were grown at 37°C in M9 minimal
medium containing glycerol, amino acids, maltose (0.4%), and IPTG (1 mM)
until early log phase . Each culture was divided into two portions, one
of which was treated with 3 mM AMS at 37°C for 30 min (+) and not
treated with AMS (–) . Cells were then pulse-labeled with [35S]methionine
for 30 s at 37°C and processed for MBP immunoprecipitation for
visualization of labeled MBP species . The positions of the precursor (p)
and mature (m) forms of MBP are indicated . The percent export values
represent proportions of the mature form . (B) Verification of AMS
modification by the blockage of subsequent Mal-PEG modification . Cells
expressing SecY with cysteine substitutions, as indicated by the residue
numbers, were grown as described above for panel A and treated with AMS
as described above (+) or not treated with AMS (–) . The samples were
precipitated with 5% (final concentration) trichloroacetic acid and
solubilized with 1% SDS supplemented with (+) or without (–) 5 mM
Mal-PEG, as described in Materials and Methods . After SDS-PAGE, the
SecY-His6-Myc proteins were detected by anti-Myc
immunoblotting . The positions of SecY-His6-Myc (Y), its
AMS-modified form (YAMS), and its Mal-PEG-modified form (YMal-PEG)
are indicated . The asterisk marks a nonspecific background protein.
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We then examined the actual abilities of the cysteine residues to
receive the chemical modification by externally added AMS . Thus, the
AMS-treated and untreated samples were subjected to SDS denaturation
and to the second modification by using Mal-PEG (see Materials and
Methods) . When SecY was derivatized with Mal-PEG, its SDS-PAGE
mobility was retarded due to the added mass of this reagent . This
resulted in the disappearance of the normal-mobility band (Fig.
4B, compare the Y bands in lanes 3 and 4) with the
concomitant appearance of a new, slowly migrating and broad band (YMal-PEG
in Fig . 4B, lane 4) . The Mal-PEG-modified SecY band
was faint, presumably due to its broadening and low-efficiency
blotting . The band indicated by the asterisk in Fig . 4B was
due to a background protein, which we believe contained some
periplasmic and cytosolic cysteine residues, the latter of which
remained reactive with Mal-PEG irrespective of the previous treatment
of the intact cells with AMS (Fig . 4B, lanes 2, 6,
10, 14, 18, 22, and 26) .
The cysteine introduced at position 137 was not blocked by AMS
treatment; therefore, this SecY derivative disappeared after
denaturation and Mal-PEG modification, whether or not the cells had
been treated with AMS (Fig . 4B, lanes 2 and 4) . In contrast,
all the other cysteine variants tested were significantly affected
by AMS treatment, such that large fractions of the Y band became
refractory to the Mal-PEG modification (Fig . 4B, lanes
6, 10, 14, and 18) . They were all fully modified by Mal-PEG without
pretreatment with AMS (Fig . 4B, lanes 8, 12, 16, and
20) . Close inspections indicated that the mobility of the Y band was
slightly shifted upward in the AMS-treated samples, presumably
representing its AMS-modified form (YAMS observed in Fig.
4B, lanes 5, 6, 9, 10, 13, 14, 17, and 18) . The
cysteine-less SecY was not affected by AMS or Mal-PEG (Fig.
4B, lanes 21 to 24) . These results demonstrate that
cysteine residues introduced between Gly138 and Asn141 were
accessible by AMS from the periplasmic side of the membrane . Our
results indicate that AMS can pass through the outer membrane,
probably through the porins . This bulky moiety interfered with the
translocase function when it modified the side chain at position 138
or 139 but not at position 140 or 141 . Interestingly, Gly138 resides
on the implicated functional side of the TM3 helix (see below) .
Disulfide cross-linking between the TM segments of SecY and SecG.
The cross-linking results of Satoh et al . showed that the C2-TM3-P2-TM4-C3
region of SecY is located close to SecG (19) . To obtain
further information on the SecY-SecG interaction within their TM
domains, we examined whether an intermolecular disulfide bond can be
formed between combinations of SecY and SecG single-cysteine
variants . We examined 12 cysteine substitutions in TM3 (Leu125 to
Ala136) and 11 cysteine substitutions in TM4 (Val162 to Met172) (Fig.
1) of SecY . As possible cross-linking partners, we constructed
a total of 16 SecG single-cysteine variants with substitutions
at the central eight residues of each TM (Leu10 to Val17 in TM1 and
Thr61 to Leu68 in TM2; Fig . 5) . Two compatible plasmids,
one coding for a SecY mutant and the other coding for a SecG
mutant, were introduced into the
secG
strain . On the basis of the topology models of SecY and SecG proteins
(Fig . 1) (1, 17),
we omitted some combinations with extreme topological discrepancies
(blanks in Fig . 5A) .
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FIG . 5 . SecY-SecG disulfide cross-linking involving SecY TM3 and TM4 .
(A) SecY-SecG combinations tested . Membrane fractions prepared from
cells carrying two plasmids, one expressing single-cysteine SecY-His6-Myc
and the other expressing single-cysteine SecG, were subjected to Cu2+(phenanthroline)3
oxidation . The SecY-SecG combinations are indicated by the residue
numbers where cysteine substitutions had been introduced . Samples were
analyzed by nonreducing SDS-PAGE and immunostaining using anti-Myc and
anti-SecG antibodies . Symbols: +, significant formation of a
cross-linked product; –, absence of cross-linking . The 130-11
combination gave very faint cross-linked product and was scored as (–) .
Combinations without a plus or minus have not been tested . (B)
Electrophoretic evidence for cross-linking . Membranes were incubated in
the presence (+) or absence (–) of Cu2+-phenanthroline
conjugate [Cu2+(phe)3] at 37°C and then
electrophoresed after treatment with (+) or without (–) 5%
ß-mercaptoethanol (ME) . Proteins were detected by anti-Myc (lanes 1 to
8) and anti-SecG (lanes 9 to 16) immunoblotting . The SecY-SecG
combinations are shown at the bottom by the residues of cysteine
substitutions . The identities of the products indicated by asterisks
have not been established.
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Crude membranes were prepared from cells carrying a total of 307
combinations of plasmids (Fig . 5A) . The membranes were then
subjected to oxidation with Cu2+-o-phenanthroline and
analyzed by SDS-PAGE under nonreducing conditions . SecG and SecY-His6-Myc
were detected with anti-SecG and anti-Myc immunoblotting, respectively,
whereas their covalent complex was detected by either antibody
as a mobility-shifted band (Fig . 5B) . As summarized in Fig .
5A, we identified two specific SecY-SecG combinations
that gave positive cross-linking, residues 162 and 10 and residues
134 and 68 (Fig . 5B, lanes 2 and 6) . The efficiency
of cross-linking was almost quantitative for the 162-10 combination
and somewhat lower for the 134-68 combination . Although a
cross-linked product was slightly detected for a 130 (SecY)-11 (SecG)
combination (Fig . 5B, lane 4), its significance is
questionable . We did not observe any cross-linked product in other
combinations of SecY and SecG derivatives . The cross-linking
reactions depended on the oxidant (Fig . 5B) . The
SecY(Gly134Cys)-SecG(Leu68Cys) combination gave an additional two
bands after oxidation (Fig . 5B, lane 14,
asterisks) . They did not seem to have the C-terminal (Fig.
5B, lane 6) or N-terminal (data not shown for anti-SecY
immunoblotting) sequences of SecY . From the SDS-PAGE mobility,
the lower band (indicated by a single asterisk) might have been a
SecG dimer (16) . The cross-linked band between
SecY(Gly134Cys)-SecG(Leu68Cys) disappeared after treatment with
ß-mercaptoethanol, confirming that they were connected by a disulfide
bond (Fig . 5B, lanes 8 and 16) . The other products,
the 162-10 and 130-11 combinations, were only partially reduced by
treatments with reducing agents (data not shown) . Although the reason
for the latter observations is unknown (see also Discussion), the
specific combinations of engineered cysteines were clearly required
for the disulfide bond formation . These data suggest that SecY and
SecG interact not only via their cytosolic and periplasmic regions
(19) but also via their TM regions . Specifically, a TM3
residue Gly134 is in the vicinity of Leu68 of SecG TM2, and a TM4
residue Val162 is close to Leu10 of SecG TM1 .
TM regions of membrane proteins can play at least two roles . Whereas
some TM regions may only function to anchor the protein to the
membrane with correct local orientations, others may have more direct
functional roles . Functional importance of TM3 and TM4 of SecY was
suggested previously from our mutation studies, in which
six-amino-acid segments in the middle of each SecY TM were replaced
by unrelated sequences from the LacY TM regions (22) .
TM3 (Leu127-Ser132) and TM4 (Leu164-Met169) substitutions severely
compromised SecY function without destabilizing the protein (22) .
In contrast, none of the cysteine-scanning single-amino-acid
substitutions in TM3 and TM4 created in this study impaired SecY
function to the same extent as the six-amino-acid replacements did .
These results do not necessarily dismiss the importance of the TM3
and TM4 residues . A severe loss of function by a single amino acid
change can be expected for such a residue that directly contributes
to an enzymatic active site . It is doubtful that SecY has such a
specific "active site," since it does not catalyze any chemical
reaction . Each of amino acid residues in SecY TMs might have a more
cumulative type of role .
The sequence features and topology determination experiments had
predicted that a SecYEG complex contains a total of 15 TM helices (1,
18, 21), which were indeed visualized by a
two-dimensional crystal analysis (4) . More
recently, high-resolution determination of the X-ray structure of the
SecYEß from Methanococcus jannaschii (28)
revealed clearly that TM3 and TM4, like other TM segments, form
alpha-helices . van den Berg et al . (28) discussed
the structure of E . coli SecYEG by integrating its two-dimensional
crystal-based density map (4) and the structure of the
M . jannaschii complex . We also modeled the E .
coli SecY structure as shown in Fig . 6B and C
from the published coordinates of the archaeal complex (PDB accession
code, 1RHZ), using the Molecular Operating Environment program
(Chemical Computing Group, Inc., Montreal, Quebec, Canada) . The
resulting top view (from the periplasmic side) and two side views are
presented in Fig . 6B and C, respectively . For
clarity, the SecE (blue) and the ß (magenta) subunits from the M.
jannaschii SecY complex are superimposed (Fig . 6B) .
These analyses justify the helical wheel representations of the
E . coli SecY TM3 and TM4 (Fig . 6A) . The TM3
(Arg121-Gly138) and TM4 (Tyr157-Glu176) regions are highlighted in
teal and green, respectively, in Fig . 6B and C .
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FIG . 6 . Important helix surfaces of TM3 and TM4 . (A) Helical wheel
representations and SecY-SecG contact sites . Amino acid residues in TM3
and TM4 of SecY and TM1 and TM2 of SecG are shown in helical wheel
representations viewed from the periplasmic side . TM3 and TM2 as well as
TM4 and TM1 are paired as shown by thick broken lines on the basis of
our disulfide cross-linking results . The functionally important SecY
residues identified in this study are shown by large letters .
Hydrophobic amino acids are shown by circles with a black background .
Alanine is shown by circles with a gray background . Residues in SecG at
which suppressor mutations against the secY104 mutation have been
isolated (19) are shown by squares . The proposed
TM3-TM2 helix surface with relatively hydrophilic amino acids is
indicated by a black line . (B) A periplasmic top view of SecY on the
basis of the three-dimensional structure of the M . jannaschii
SecY complex . The coordinates for the M . jannaschii SecY
complex (28) were used to model E . coli SecY according to
the Molecular Operating Environment program . A top view of SecY from the
periplasmic side is shown in gray, with TM3 and TM4 highlighted in teal
and green, respectively, and with the M . jannaschii SecE
(E) (blue) and ß (magenta) subunits superimposed . The functionally
important TM3 and TM4 residues identified in this study are indicated by
space-filled side chains, in which the residues of contact with SecG
(Gly134 and Val162) are shown in red . Schematic images for the locations
of the TM segments of SecG are shown by G1 and G2 . The black wavy line
indicates the proposed hydrophilic surface formed by SecYTM3 and SecG
TM2 . (C) Side views around TM3 and TM4 of SecY . A view from the putative
SecG side (G1-G2 mid point in panel B) is shown on the left, whereas its
90°-rotated
version is shown on the right . TM2b (Ser76-Pro100), TM3, TM4, TM5
(Ile187-His205), and TM7 (Asn270-Ser292) are shown in dark blue, teal,
green, pink, and brown, respectively . The important TM3 and TM4
residues, including the Arg121-Glu176 pair (see the text), are space
filled for their side chains, along with residues in other TMs that are
discussed in the text.
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We examined the abilities of the TM3 and TM4 cysteine substitution
variants to correct the lethal export defect caused by the secY39
secG
double mutation . This strict complementation test identified several
residues that contribute to the full functionality of SecY (shown by
space-fill representations in Fig . 6B and C) . It
should be noted that their importance might not be restricted to the
SecG-deficient conditions, since some double substitutions
compromised SecY function in the secG+ background (Fig.
2) . At any rate, it is remarkable that residues
assigned as functionally important exhibited specific features in
their alignments across the membrane (Fig . 6A) . The
important TM3 residues are distributed in a periodical fashion along
the polypeptide, a feature that might define an important helix
surface of this TM segment . Similarly, the important TM4 residues
tended to exhibit one-sided distribution axially, as well as a
vertical polarity in that its cytosolic side is enriched with them .
In earlier studies by Taura et al., one such residue, Gly175, was
characterized by a Gly175Asp secY104 mutation that caused
cold-sensitive growth and protein export (25,
26) . It is imaginable that TM4 has an important
role in its cytosolic side .
Our disulfide cross-linking experiments identified two putative
SecY-SecG contact points involving their TMs . One involves Gly134
located within the functional surface of TM3 helix of SecY and Leu68
within TM2 of SecG . The other involves Val162 located in the opposite
side of the SecY TM4 helix surface that was assigned as functionally
important and Leu10 of SecG TM1 . The SecY side chains involved in the
contact are shown in red in Fig . 6B and C . These
results led us to locate SecG TM2 close to SecY TM3 and SecG TM1
close to SecY TM4, as shown schematically in Fig . 6B .
Since each TM pair contains only a unique contact site (Fig.
5A), the SecY and SecG TMs may cross each other rather
than running in parallel . Indeed, SecY TM4 is tilted in the
bilayer (28) . The above locations of the SecG TMs are
different from the SecYEG arrangement proposed by van den Berg et al .
(28) on the basis of the similar orientations of SecG
TM2 and the ß chain of M . jannaschii . It should be
pointed out in this respect that SecG in SecA-containing organisms
and ß in SecA-lacking organisms might be totally different
in their functions . In addition, SecG was reported to invert its
orientation of membrane integration during function, in conjunction
with conformational changes in SecA (9, 18,
24) . Thus, the orientation in the "resting state"
alone cannot be taken as a strong guide to formulate a structural
model . We propose the arrangement shown in Fig . 6B
as an alternative disposition of SecG TMs in the SecYEG complex .
The SecY TM3 helix and SecG TM2 helix show some amphiphilicity
(Fig . 6A) . The cross-linking results indicate that their
hydrophilic surfaces face each other if not running in parallel .
Also, the hydrophilic side of SecY TM3 coincides with the
functionally important helix surface identified above . This
relatively hydrophilic helix surface also includes residue 138 that
was shown to be accessible from the periplasmic side by the
sulfhydryl alkylating agent that inactivated the translocase function
by modifying the engineered cysteine at this position . Thus, this
relatively hydrophilic part of the SecY-SecG TM segments (shown by
wavy black line in Fig . 6B) is partially open to
the periplasmic side and functionally important . While residue 137 is
no longer accessible by AMS, the residues between positions 138 and
141 are all periplasmically exposed and capable of being modified
by AMS . However, AMS modification at position 140 or 141 had no
effect on protein export . Thus, residues 138 and 139 may occupy a
critical region of the channel such that a bulky moiety at these
positions is interfering, although a tryptophan substitution for
Gly138 did not inactivate the channel (H . Mori, unpublished results) .
We note that Thr289 and Ser292 in TM7 face the functionally
important part of TM3 . A TM7 region near the periplasm has been
discussed by van den Berg et al . to have a role in channel gating and
lateral movement of a signal sequence (28) . SecY TM3 and
SecG TM2 might contribute to such a process . It should also be
noted that Phe63 and Ser67 of SecG, which are located within the
TM3-TM2 interface region (Fig . 6A) are known as sites of
mutations that suppress the secY104 defect, consistent with
their contribution to the gate control of the channel .
Although the important TM3 residues are mostly located toward the
periplasmic side of the membrane, Gly123 is located near the
cytoplasmic surface and facing Ala88 in TM2b . Thus, TM3's role is not
confined to a periplasmic event . We believe that TM3 and TM4
interact, particularly at their cytosolic ends, where Arg121 of TM3
is located close to Glu176 of TM4 . Their estimated distance of 3.8 Å
suggests that they form a salt bridge . Indeed, the Arg121Cys and
Glu176Cys variants showed reduced functionality (Fig . 2) .
Also, cytosolic regions before TM3 and after TM4 include residues in
close proximity to the cytosolic region of SecG (19) .
Although uneven localization of the important residues in TM4 to
one side of the helix is evident, neither this helix nor interacting
TM1 helix of SecG is particularly amphiphilic (Fig . 6A) .
Overall, they are very hydrophobic . The contact site with SecG TM1 is
on the opposite side of the functional TM4 surface and of the
secY104 alteration site . The contact point on SecG, Leu10, and
its "neighbor" Val17 are also known as sites of suppressor
alterations (Leu10Arg, Leu10His, and Val17Asp) against the secY104
defect (19) . The high efficiency of cross-linking
between cysteines introduced into position 162 (SecY) and position 10
(SecG) suggests that these residues are very close to each other . In
fact, we observed that this intermolecular cross-linkage was not
readily broken by a reducing agent even in the presence of SDS .
Although this phenomenon is not fully understood, the extreme
hydrophobicity of this region might have precluded the access of the
reducing agent to this disulfide bond . In any case, the
charge-introducing suppressor mutations seem to indicate that
weakening of this hydrophobic interaction acts to shift the channel
conformation to a more open state .
The importance of the cytosolic side of TM4 is corroborated by the
discussion of van den Berg et al . that the following flexible loop
containing some conserved glycine residues is involved in the
widening of the hourglass-shaped main conduit (28) .
We speculate that such a regulatory function can be assisted by SecG
that interacts with the C2-TM3-P2-TM4-C3 region of SecY in manners
partially resolved by our present genetic information and our
previous cross-linking studies (19) .
Undoubtedly, a signal peptide and SecA will be additional factors
that interact with this region of the complex . These elements should
function with remarkable mobility (5, 18) .
Further exploitation of genetics and structural biology will be
promising for our deeper understanding of the dynamic functioning of
protein translocase .
We thank Yoshinori Akiyama for stimulating discussions; Tomoya
Tsukazaki for help in the SecY structure modeling; and Michiyo Sano,
Kunihiko Yoshikaie, and Kiyoko Mochizuki for technical support .
This work was supported in part by CREST, JST (Japan Science and
Technology Agency) (to K.I.), by grants from the Ministry of
Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan (to H.M .
and K.I.), and by National Project on Protein Structural and
Functional Analyses of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports,
Science and Technology of Japan .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Institute for Virus
Research, Kyoto University, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto 606-8507, Japan . Phone: (75)
751-4015 . Fax: (75) 771-5699 . E-mail:
kito@virus.kyoto-u.ac.jp .
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