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J. Bacteriol., Apr 1995, 1780-1787, Vol 177, No. 7
I Guilvout, E Carniel and AP Pugsley
The iron starvation-induced, 2,042-amino-acid protein HMWP2 of Yersinia
enterocolitica has two internal hydrophobic segments which might promote
its export and association with the cytoplasmic membrane. To determine
whether part of HMWP2 could be exported beyond the periplasmic face of the
cytoplasmic membrane, we used TnphoA mutagenesis to construct 10 hybrid
proteins in which periplasmic alkaline phosphatase (PhoA) was fused to the
end of C-terminally truncated HMWP1 (at amino acid positions 1751 and 1753
two independent isolates]) had high alkaline phosphate activity (close to
that of the native enzyme), both in Escherichia coli and in Y.
pseudotuberculosis, indicating that the PhoA segment of the hybrid reached
the periplasm. Deletion studies showed that the export signal resides in
the second hydrophobic segment of HMWP2. This result would be compatible
with the topology of the protein in the cytoplasmic membrane predicted from
the distribution of charged amino acids at either end of the two
hydrophobic segments. However, two hybrids in which the junction was even
further toward the C terminus of HMMWP2 (at positions 1793 and 1999) had
only weak alkaline phosphatase activity, suggesting that the predicted
topology is incorrect. The location of HMWP2 was therefore determined by
subcellular fractionation. The results indicate that HMPW2 is mainly
cytoplasmic, consistent with its presumed role in the ATP-dependent,
nonribosomal synthesis of an unknown peptide. We propose that the high
alkaline phosphatase activity associated with some of the HMWP-2-PhoA
hybrids results from the unmasking of the cryptic export signal activity in
the second hydrophobic segment of HMPW2.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Yersinia spp. HMWP2, a cytosolic protein with a cryptic internal signal sequence which can promote alkaline phosphatase export
Unite de Bacteriologie Moleculaire et Medicale, Institut Pasteur, Paris France.
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