Determining the Conductance of the SecY Protein Translocation Channel for Small Molecules

0301 basic medicine Cell Membrane Permeability Escherichia coli Proteins Cell Membrane Lipid Bilayers Biological Transport Cell Biology Protein Transport 03 medical and health sciences Bacterial Proteins Mutation Escherichia coli Molecular Biology SEC Translocation Channels Sequence Deletion
DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2007.03.022 Publication Date: 2007-05-25T12:54:55Z
ABSTRACT
The channel formed by the SecY complex must maintain the membrane barrier for ions and other small molecules during the translocation of membrane or secretory proteins. We have tested the permeability of the channel by using planar bilayers containing reconstituted purified E. coli SecY complex. Wild-type SecY complex did not show any conductance for ions or water. Deletion of the "plug," a short helix normally located in the center of the SecY complex, or modification of a cysteine introduced into the plug resulted in transient channel openings; a similar effect was seen with a mutation in the pore ring, a constriction in the center of the channel. Permanent channel opening occurred when the plug was moved out of the way by disulfide-bridge formation. These data show that the resting channel on its own forms a barrier for small molecules, with both the pore ring and the plug required for the seal; channel opening requires movement of the plug.
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