Unassisted translocation of large polypeptide domains across phospholipid bilayers
Open Access
- 27 November 2006
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 175 (5) , 767-777
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.200608101
Abstract
Although transmembrane proteins generally require membrane-embedded machinery for integration, a few can insert spontaneously into liposomes. Previously, we established that the tail-anchored (TA) protein cytochrome b(5) (b5) can posttranslationally translocate 28 residues downstream to its transmembrane domain (TMD) across protein-free bilayers (Brambillasca, S., M. Yabal, P. Soffientini, S. Stefanovic, M. Makarow, R.S. Hegde, and N. Borgese. 2005. EMBO J. 24:2533-2542). In the present study, we investigated the limits of this unassisted translocation and report that surprisingly long (85 residues) domains of different sequence and charge placed downstream of b5's TMD can posttranslationally translocate into mammalian microsomes and liposomes at nanomolar nucleotide concentrations. Furthermore, integration of these constructs occurred in vivo in translocon-defective yeast strains. Unassisted translocation was not unique to b5 but was also observed for another TA protein (protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B) whose TMD, like the one of b5, is only moderately hydrophobic. In contrast, more hydrophobic TMDs, like synaptobrevin's, were incapable of supporting unassisted integration, possibly because of their tendency to aggregate in aqueous solution. Our data resolve long-standing discrepancies on TA protein insertion and are relevant to membrane evolution, biogenesis, and physiology.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Translocation of molecules into cells by pH-dependent insertion of a transmembrane helixProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- PROTEIN TRANSLOCATION BY THE SEC61/SECY CHANNELAnnual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology, 2005
- The complexity of pathways for protein import into thylakoids: it's not easy being greenBiochemical Society Transactions, 2005
- The role of lipids in membrane insertion and translocation of bacterial proteinsBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Molecular Cell Research, 2004
- The tale of tail-anchored proteinsThe Journal of cell biology, 2003
- PTP1B: From the sidelines to the front lines!FEBS Letters, 2003
- Tail-Anchored Protein Insertion into Yeast ER Requires a Novel Posttranslational Mechanism Which Is Independent of the SEC MachineryBiochemistry, 2002
- Structures of the intradiskal loops and amino terminus of the G‐protein receptor, rhodopsinChemical Biology & Drug Design, 2000
- Spontaneous, pH-Dependent Membrane Insertion of a Transbilayer α-HelixBiochemistry, 1997
- Semisynthetic proteins: model systems for the study of the insertion of hydrophobic peptides into preformed lipid bilayersBiochemistry, 1994