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Structure of the post-translational protein translocation machinery of the ER membrane
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Structure of the post-translational protein translocation machinery of the ER membrane
Structure of the post-translational protein translocation machinery of the ER membrane
Journal Article

Structure of the post-translational protein translocation machinery of the ER membrane

2019
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Overview
Many proteins must translocate through the protein-conducting Sec61 channel in the eukaryotic endoplasmic reticulum membrane or the SecY channel in the prokaryotic plasma membrane 1 , 2 . Proteins with highly hydrophobic signal sequences are first recognized by the signal recognition particle (SRP) 3 , 4 and then moved co-translationally through the Sec61 or SecY channel by the associated translating ribosome. Substrates with less hydrophobic signal sequences bypass the SRP and are moved through the channel post-translationally 5 , 6 . In eukaryotic cells, post-translational translocation is mediated by the association of the Sec61 channel with another membrane protein complex, the Sec62–Sec63 complex 7 – 9 , and substrates are moved through the channel by the luminal BiP ATPase 9 . How the Sec62–Sec63 complex activates the Sec61 channel for post-translational translocation is not known. Here we report the electron cryo-microscopy structure of the Sec complex from Saccharomyces cerevisiae , consisting of the Sec61 channel and the Sec62, Sec63, Sec71 and Sec72 proteins. Sec63 causes wide opening of the lateral gate of the Sec61 channel, priming it for the passage of low-hydrophobicity signal sequences into the lipid phase, without displacing the channel’s plug domain. Lateral channel opening is triggered by Sec63 interacting both with cytosolic loops in the C-terminal half of Sec61 and transmembrane segments in the N-terminal half of the Sec61 channel. The cytosolic Brl domain of Sec63 blocks ribosome binding to the channel and recruits Sec71 and Sec72, positioning them for the capture of polypeptides associated with cytosolic Hsp70 10 . Our structure shows how the Sec61 channel is activated for post-translational protein translocation. The cryo-EM structure of the post-translational protein translocation machinery of the endoplasmic reticulum membrane shows that Sec63 opens the channel, enabling insertion of low-hydrophobicity signal sequences into the lipid phase.
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK,Nature Publishing Group
Subject

101/28

/ 631/535/1258/1259

/ 631/80/2023/2022

/ 82/1

/ 82/83

/ Adenosine triphosphatase

/ Binding sites

/ Biopolymers

/ Channel opening

/ Endoplasmic reticulum

/ Endoplasmic Reticulum - chemistry

/ Fungi

/ Heat shock proteins

/ Heat-Shock Proteins - chemistry

/ Heat-Shock Proteins - metabolism

/ Heat-Shock Proteins - ultrastructure

/ Hsp70 protein

/ Humanities and Social Sciences

/ Hydrophobicity

/ Letter

/ Lipids

/ Machinery

/ Membrane Glycoproteins - chemistry

/ Membrane Glycoproteins - metabolism

/ Membrane Glycoproteins - ultrastructure

/ Membrane proteins

/ Membrane Proteins - chemistry

/ Membrane Proteins - metabolism

/ Membrane Proteins - ultrastructure

/ Membrane Transport Proteins - chemistry

/ Membrane Transport Proteins - metabolism

/ Membrane Transport Proteins - ultrastructure

/ Membranes

/ Microscopy

/ Models, Molecular

/ multidisciplinary

/ Physiological aspects

/ Polyethylene glycol

/ Polypeptides

/ Post-translation

/ Priming

/ Protein Binding

/ Protein Processing, Post-Translational

/ Protein structure

/ Protein Transport

/ Proteins

/ Resveratrol

/ Saccharomyces cerevisiae

/ Saccharomyces cerevisiae - chemistry

/ Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins - chemistry

/ Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins - metabolism

/ Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins - ultrastructure

/ Science

/ Science (multidisciplinary)

/ SEC Translocation Channels - chemistry

/ SEC Translocation Channels - metabolism

/ SEC Translocation Channels - ultrastructure

/ Signal recognition particle

/ Signal transduction

/ Structure

/ Substrates

/ Translation

/ Translocation