LepB is a key membrane component of the cellular secretion machinery, which releases secreted proteins into the periplasm by cleaving the inner membrane-bound leader. We showed that LepB is also an essential component of the machinery hijacked by the tRNase colicin D for its import. Here we demonstrate that this non-catalytic activity of LepB is to promote the association of the central domain of colicin D with the inner membrane before the FtsH-dependent proteolytic processing and translocation of the toxic tRNase domain into the cytoplasm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEukaryotic release factor 3 (eRF3) is implicated in translation termination and also interacts with the poly(A)-binding protein (PABP, Pab1 in yeast), a major player in mRNA metabolism. Despite conservation of this interaction, its precise function remains elusive. First, we showed experimentally that yeast eRF3 does not contain any obvious consensus PAM2 (PABP-interacting motif 2).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDNase colicins E2 and E7, both of which appropriate the BtuB/Tol translocation machinery to cross the outer membrane, undergo a processing step as they enter the cytoplasm. This endoproteolytic cleavage is essential for their killing action. A processed form of the same size, 18.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Soc Trans
December 2012
The mechanisms for importing colicins from the extracellular medium into Escherichia coli target cells implicate a complex cascade of interactions with host proteins. It is known that colicins interact with membrane receptors, and they may appropriate them structurally, but not functionally, as a scaffold on the surface of the target cell so that they can be translocated across the outer membrane. During the import into the periplasm, colicins parasitize functionally membrane porins and energy-transducers by mimicking their natural substrates or interacting partners.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt has long been suggested that the import of nuclease colicins requires protein processing; however it had never been formally demonstrated. Here we show that two RNase colicins, E3 and D, which appropriate two different translocation machineries to cross the outer membrane (BtuB/Tol and FepA/TonB, respectively), undergo a processing step inside the cell that is essential to their killing action. We have detected the presence of the C-terminal catalytic domains of these colicins in the cytoplasm of target bacteria.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFColicin D import into Escherichia coli requires an interaction via its TonB box with the energy transducer TonB. Colicin D cytotoxicity is inhibited by specific tonB mutations, but it is restored by suppressor mutations in the TonB box. Here we report that there is a second site of interaction between TonB and colicin D, which is dependent upon a 45-amino acid region, within the uncharacterized central domain of colicin D.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBacterial release factors RF1 and RF2 are methylated on the Gln residue of a universally conserved tripeptide motif GGQ, which interacts with the peptidyl transferase center of the large ribosomal subunit, triggering hydrolysis of the ester bond in peptidyl-tRNA and releasing the newly synthesized polypeptide from the ribosome. In vitro experiments have shown that the activity of RF2 is stimulated by Gln methylation. The viability of Escherichia coli K12 strains depends on the integrity of the release factor methyltransferase PrmC, because K12 strains are partially deficient in RF2 activity due to the presence of a Thr residue at position 246 instead of Ala.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe transfer RNase colicin D and ionophoric colicin B appropriate the outer membrane iron siderophore receptor FepA and share a common translocation requirement for the TonB pathway to cross the outer membrane. Despite the almost identical sequences of the N-terminal domains required for the translocation of colicins D and B, two spontaneous tonB mutations (Arg158Ser and Pro161Leu) completely abolished colicin D toxicity but did not affect either the sensitivity to other colicins or the FepA-dependent siderophore uptake capacity. The sensitivity to colicin D of both tonB mutants was fully restored by specific suppressor mutations in the TonB box of colicin D, at Ser18(Thr) and Met19(Ile), respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFColicins are toxins secreted by Escherichia coli in order to kill their competitors. Colicin D is a 75 kDa protein that consists of a translocation domain, a receptor-binding domain and a cytotoxic domain, which specifically cleaves the anticodon loop of all four tRNA(Arg) isoacceptors, thereby inactivating protein synthesis and leading to cell death. Here we report the 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA major group of colicins comprises molecules that possess nuclease activity and kill sensitive cells by cleaving RNA or DNA. Recent data open the possibility that the tRNase colicin D, the rRNase colicin E3 and the DNase colicin E7 undergo proteolytic processing, such that only the C-terminal domain of the molecule, carrying the nuclease activity, enters the cytoplasm. The proteases responsible for the proteolytic processing remain unidentified.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeptidyl-tRNA hydrolase in Escherichia coli, encoded by pth, is essential for recycling tRNA molecules sequestered as peptidyl-tRNA as a result of pre-mature dissociation from the ribosome during translation. Genes homologous to pth are present in other bacteria, yeast and man, but not in archaea. The homologous gene in Bacillus subtilis, spoVC, was first identified as a gene involved in sporulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF