Electron spin resonance and fluorescence studies of the bound-state conformation of a model protein substrate to the chaperone SecB

Panse, Vikram G. ; Beena, K. ; Philipp, Reinhard ; Trommer, Wolfgang E. ; Vogel, Pia D. ; Varadarajan, Raghavan (2001) Electron spin resonance and fluorescence studies of the bound-state conformation of a model protein substrate to the chaperone SecB Journal of Biological Chemistry, 276 (36). pp. 33681-33688. ISSN 0021-9258

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Official URL: http://www.jbc.org/content/276/36/33681.short

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M104466200

Abstract

SecB is a homotetrameric, cytosolic chaperone that forms part of the protein translocation machinery inEscherichia coli. We have investigated the bound-state conformation of a model protein substrate of SecB, bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) as well as the conformation of SecB itself by using proximity relationships based on site-directed spin-labeling and pyrene fluorescence methods. BPTI is a 58-residue protein and contains three disulfide groups between residues 5 and 55, 14 and 38, as well as 30 and 51. Mutants of BPTI that contained only a single disulfide were reduced, and the free cysteines were labeled with either thiol-specific spin labels or pyrene maleimide. The relative proximity of the labeled residues was studied using either electron spin resonance spectroscopy or fluorescence spectroscopy. The data suggest that SecB binds a collapsed coil of reduced unfolded BPTI, which then undergoes a structural rearrangement to a more extended state upon binding to SecB. Binding occurs at multiple sites on the substrate, and the binding site on each SecB monomer accommodates less than 21 substrate residues. In addition, we have labeled four solvent-accessible cysteine residues in the SecB tetramer and have investigated their relative spatial arrangement in the presence and absence of the substrate protein. The electron spin resonance data suggest that these cysteine residues are in close proximity (15 Å) when no substrate protein is bound but move away to a distance of greater than 20 Å when SecB binds substrate. This is the first direct evidence of a conformational change in SecB upon binding of a substrate protein.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
ID Code:57297
Deposited On:26 Aug 2011 04:23
Last Modified:26 Aug 2011 04:23

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