Proofreading of substrate by the Escherichia coli Twin Arginine Translocase
The Twin Arginine Translocase (Tat) is one of two protein translocation mechanisms in E. coli to move proteins across the inner bacterial membrane, from the cytosol to the periplasm. A unique feature of the Tat pathway is its ability to translocate fully folded proteins, indeed, in E. coli the Tat p...
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Other Authors: | |
Published: |
University of Kent
2017
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.733282 |
id |
ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-733282 |
---|---|
record_format |
oai_dc |
spelling |
ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7332822019-03-05T15:46:06ZProofreading of substrate by the Escherichia coli Twin Arginine TranslocaseJones, Alexander StephenRobinson, Colin ; Brown, David2017The Twin Arginine Translocase (Tat) is one of two protein translocation mechanisms in E. coli to move proteins across the inner bacterial membrane, from the cytosol to the periplasm. A unique feature of the Tat pathway is its ability to translocate fully folded proteins, indeed, in E. coli the Tat pathway preferentially transports correctly folded proteins. This 'proofreading' mechanism, as it has been dubbed, is of interest to the biopharmaceutical industry, however little is known of the mechanism by which Tat proofreads a substrates conformational state. Initial studies (chapter 3) addressed if the Tat proofreading mechanism sensed the surface charge or hydrophobicity of a substrate. To this end, surface residues of an scFv were mutated to create areas of charge and hydrophobicity without altering tertiary structure. Expression of these variants in E. coli revealed that Tat proofreading is tolerant of surface charge and hydrophobicity, but dependent on conformational flexibility. Further studies utilising a maquette in various folding states, confirmed Tat proofreading is sensitive to the structural rigidity of substrates (chapter 4). Investigations then went on to assess the quality of protein entering the periplasm via the Tat pathway by comparing it to the same protein transported by the General Secretory (Sec) pathway (chapter 5). This revealed, at least for a relatively simple biotheraputic, Tat-translocated protein is of the same quality to Sec-translocated protein. Finally, the question of what is responsible for the proofreading ability of Tat began to be addressed through C-terminal truncation studies of the Tat components that attempted to restore export of export-incompatible substrates (chapter 6).500University of Kenthttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.733282https://kar.kent.ac.uk/65666/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation |
collection |
NDLTD |
sources |
NDLTD |
topic |
500 |
spellingShingle |
500 Jones, Alexander Stephen Proofreading of substrate by the Escherichia coli Twin Arginine Translocase |
description |
The Twin Arginine Translocase (Tat) is one of two protein translocation mechanisms in E. coli to move proteins across the inner bacterial membrane, from the cytosol to the periplasm. A unique feature of the Tat pathway is its ability to translocate fully folded proteins, indeed, in E. coli the Tat pathway preferentially transports correctly folded proteins. This 'proofreading' mechanism, as it has been dubbed, is of interest to the biopharmaceutical industry, however little is known of the mechanism by which Tat proofreads a substrates conformational state. Initial studies (chapter 3) addressed if the Tat proofreading mechanism sensed the surface charge or hydrophobicity of a substrate. To this end, surface residues of an scFv were mutated to create areas of charge and hydrophobicity without altering tertiary structure. Expression of these variants in E. coli revealed that Tat proofreading is tolerant of surface charge and hydrophobicity, but dependent on conformational flexibility. Further studies utilising a maquette in various folding states, confirmed Tat proofreading is sensitive to the structural rigidity of substrates (chapter 4). Investigations then went on to assess the quality of protein entering the periplasm via the Tat pathway by comparing it to the same protein transported by the General Secretory (Sec) pathway (chapter 5). This revealed, at least for a relatively simple biotheraputic, Tat-translocated protein is of the same quality to Sec-translocated protein. Finally, the question of what is responsible for the proofreading ability of Tat began to be addressed through C-terminal truncation studies of the Tat components that attempted to restore export of export-incompatible substrates (chapter 6). |
author2 |
Robinson, Colin ; Brown, David |
author_facet |
Robinson, Colin ; Brown, David Jones, Alexander Stephen |
author |
Jones, Alexander Stephen |
author_sort |
Jones, Alexander Stephen |
title |
Proofreading of substrate by the Escherichia coli Twin Arginine Translocase |
title_short |
Proofreading of substrate by the Escherichia coli Twin Arginine Translocase |
title_full |
Proofreading of substrate by the Escherichia coli Twin Arginine Translocase |
title_fullStr |
Proofreading of substrate by the Escherichia coli Twin Arginine Translocase |
title_full_unstemmed |
Proofreading of substrate by the Escherichia coli Twin Arginine Translocase |
title_sort |
proofreading of substrate by the escherichia coli twin arginine translocase |
publisher |
University of Kent |
publishDate |
2017 |
url |
https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.733282 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT jonesalexanderstephen proofreadingofsubstratebytheescherichiacolitwinargininetranslocase |
_version_ |
1718996299260362752 |