In vitro interaction of the housekeeping secA1 with the accessory secA2 protein of mycobacterium tuberculosis

 

Irfan Prabudiansyah, Ilja Kusters, Arnold J. M. Driessen

PloS ONE
2015 vol: 10(6) pp: e0128788 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0128788

Abstract

The majority of proteins that are secreted across the bacterial cytoplasmic membrane leave the cell via the Sec pathway, which in its minimal form consists of the dimeric ATP-driven motor protein SecA that associates with the protein-conducting membrane pore SecYEG. Some Gram-positive bacteria contain two homologues of SecA, termed SecA1 and SecA2. SecA1 is the essential housekeeping protein, whereas SecA2 is not essential but is involved in the translocation of a subset of proteins, including various virulence factors. Some SecA2 containing bacteria also harbor a homologous SecY2 protein that may form a separate translocase. Interestingly, mycobacteria contain only one SecY protein and thus both SecA1 and SecA2 are required to interact with SecYEG, either individually or together as a heterodimer. In order to address whether SecA1 and SecA2 cooperate during secretion of SecA2 dependent proteins, we examined the oligomeric state of SecA1 and SecA2 of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and their interactions with SecA2 and the cognate SecA1, respectively. We conclude that both SecA1 and SecA2 individually form homodimers in solution but when both proteins are present simultaneously, they form dissociable heterodimers.

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Topics: Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Dimers, Dimerization, Fluorescence, Fluorescence microscopy, Fluorescence spectroscopy, Protein interactions, Protein secretion, Monolith – MicroScale Thermophoresis, MST, Proteins, Publications

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