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J. Bacteriol., 10 1996, 5954-5959, Vol 178, No. 20
O Francetic and CA Kumamoto
Ribose-binding protein (RBP) is exported to the periplasm of Escherichia
coli via the general export pathway. An rbsB-lacZ gene fusion was
constructed and used to select mutants defective in RBP export. The
spontaneous Lac+ mutants isolated in this selection contained either
single-amino-acid substitutions or a deletion of the RBP signal sequence.
Intact rbsB genes containing eight different point mutations in the signal
sequence were reconstructed, and the effects of the mutations on RBP export
were examined. Most of the mutations caused severe defects in RBP export.
In addition, different suppressor mutations in SecY/PrlA protein were
analyzed for their effects on the export of RBP signal sequence mutants in
the presence or absence of SecB. Several RBP signal sequence mutants were
efficiently suppressed, but others were not suppressed. Export of an RBP
signal sequence mutant in prlA mutant strains was partially dependent on
SecB, which is in contrast to the SecB independence of wild-type RBP
export. However, the kinetics of export of an RBP signal sequence mutant
point to a rapid loss of pre-RBP export competence, which occurs in strains
containing or lacking SecB. These results suggest that SecB does not
stabilize the export-competent conformation of RBP and may affect
translocation by stabilizing the binding of pre-RBP at the translocation
site.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Escherichia coli SecB stimulates export without maintaining export competence of ribose-binding protein signal sequence mutants
Department of Molecular Biology and Microbiology, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts 02111, USA.
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