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Stable periplasmic secretion intermediate in the general secretory pathway of Escherichia coli.
Author(s) -
Poquet I.,
Faucher D.,
Pugsley A.P.
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
the embo journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.484
H-Index - 392
eISSN - 1460-2075
pISSN - 0261-4189
DOI - 10.1002/j.1460-2075.1993.tb05653.x
Subject(s) - periplasmic space , pullulanase , biology , escherichia coli , secretion , microbiology and biotechnology , gene , genetics , biochemistry , enzyme
The secretion of the Klebsiella oxytoca cell surface lipoprotein pullulanase involves translocation across the cytoplasmic and outer membranes of the Gram‐negative bacterial cell envelope. A variant of pullulanase was created by fusing the signal peptide‐encoding 5′ region of the Escherichia coli gene for periplasmic MalE protein to the 3′ end of the pulA gene encoding almost the entire mature part of pullulanase. When produced in E. coli carrying the malE‐pulA gene fusion on a high copy number plasmid and the complete set of genes specifically required for pullulanase secretion on a second plasmid, the hybrid protein differed from wild‐type pullulanase as follows: (i) it was not fatty‐acylated; (ii) it was apparently processed by LepB signal peptidase rather than by LspA lipoprotein signal peptidase; (iii) it was released into the periplasm and was only slowly transported across the outer membrane, and (iv) it was released directly into the medium rather than via the usual surface‐anchored intermediate. The hybrid protein was secreted more rapidly when malE‐pulA was expressed from a low copy number plasmid. The two steps in the secretion pathway could be totally uncoupled by expressing first the malE‐pulA gene fusion and then the cognate secretion genes. These results show that fatty‐acylation of wild‐type PulA is not essential for secretion but may improve its efficiency when large amounts of the protein are produced, that the two steps in secretion can occur quite independently and that the periplasmic intermediate can persist for long periods under certain circumstances.

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