Active and passive displacement of transmembrane domains both occur during opsin biogenesis at the Sec61 translocon
Open Access
- 1 July 2006
- journal article
- Published by The Company of Biologists in Journal of Cell Science
- Vol. 119 (13) , 2826-2836
- https://doi.org/10.1242/jcs.03018
Abstract
We used a site-specific crosslinking approach to study the membrane integration of the polytopic protein opsin at the endoplasmic reticulum. We show that transmembrane domain 1 occupies two distinct Sec61-based environments during its integration. However, transmembrane domains 2 and 3 exit the Sec61 translocon more rapidly in a process that suggests a displacement model for their integration where the biosynthesis of one transmembrane domain would facilitate the exit of another. In order to investigate this hypothesis further, we studied the integration of the first and third transmembrane domains of opsin in the absence of any additional C-terminal transmembrane domains. In the case of transmembrane domain 1, we found that its lateral exit from the translocon is clearly dependent upon the synthesis of subsequent transmembrane domains. By contrast, the lateral exit of the third transmembrane domain occurred independently of any such requirement. Thus, even within a single polypeptide chain, distinct transmembrane domains display different requirements for their integration through the endoplasmic reticulum translocon, and the displacement of one transmembrane domain by another is not a global requirement for membrane integration.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Solving the membrane protein folding problemNature, 2005
- Helices on the move.Nature Structural & Molecular Biology, 2005
- Double-spanning Plant Viral Movement Protein Integration into theEndoplasmic Reticulum Membrane Is Signal Recognition Particle-dependent,Translocon-mediated, andConcertedJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2005
- Disulfide bridge formation between SecY and a translocating polypeptide localizes the translocation pore to the center of SecYThe Journal of cell biology, 2005
- Architecture of the Ribosome–Channel Complex Derived from Native MembranesJournal of Molecular Biology, 2005
- X-ray structure of a protein-conducting channelNature, 2003
- Membrane protein biosynthesis — all sewn up?Trends in Cell Biology, 1997
- Discrete Cross-linking Products Identified during Membrane Protein BiosynthesisJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1997
- Biogenesis of Polytopic Membrane Proteins: Membrane Segments Assemble within Translocation Channels prior to Membrane IntegrationCell, 1996
- Snapshots of membrane-translocating proteinsTrends in Cell Biology, 1996