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MOLECULAR CELL BIOLOGY SIXTH EDITION MOLECULAR CELL BIOLOGY SIXTH EDITION Copyright 2008 © W. H. Freeman and Company CHAPTER 13 Moving Proteins into Membranes.

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Presentation on theme: "MOLECULAR CELL BIOLOGY SIXTH EDITION MOLECULAR CELL BIOLOGY SIXTH EDITION Copyright 2008 © W. H. Freeman and Company CHAPTER 13 Moving Proteins into Membranes."— Presentation transcript:

1 MOLECULAR CELL BIOLOGY SIXTH EDITION MOLECULAR CELL BIOLOGY SIXTH EDITION Copyright 2008 © W. H. Freeman and Company CHAPTER 13 Moving Proteins into Membranes and Organelles CHAPTER 13 Moving Proteins into Membranes and Organelles Lodish Berk Kaiser Krieger Scott Bretscher Ploegh Matsudaira © 2008 W. H. Freeman and Company

2 Secretory pathway Cytosol Ribosomes ER ribosomes ER signal peptide Conformation Signal sequences (signal peptide) Translocation channel Usually requires energy Signal peptide removed before maturation

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4 ER Secretory Pathway Protein synthesis and translocation into the ER Protein folding and modification Protein transport to Gogi, lysosomes or cell surface using vesicles. N-terminus peptide sequence of 16 to 30 a.a. 1 or more positively charge a.a. follow by a stretch of 6-12 hydrophobic residues. Is cleaved before translation is completed.

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6 Cotranslational translocation

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8 SRP: signal recognition particle Cytsolic ribonucleoprotein particle Binds to TP and ribosome, and SRP receptor SRP inhibits translation if microsomes are absent If protein is too long it can’t be translocated Translocon: protein channel Protein is not folded until completely in the ER lumen

9 No ATP require just the push from the elongated peptide. Signal peptidase: cut the signal peptide BiP molecular chaperone also help in moving the protein to the ER lumen and help in the proper folding of the polypeptide.

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11 Topogenic sequences: direct membrane integration and orientation

12 Type I: Hydrophobic stop-transfer anchor sequence

13 Type II: Signal anchor sequence and is oriented by positively charged a.a. in the N-terminal of SAS

14 Type III: Signal anchor sequence and is oriented by positively charged a.a. in the C-terminal of SAS

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16 Type V: Glycosylphosphatidylinosotol (GPI)

17 Type V: Use of a transamidase

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20 MT: amphipathic N-Terminal Signal Sequence Binds receptor in the surface Cleaved in the matrix or stroma Outer and inner membranes in close contact Requires energy 20-50 a.a hydrophobic, positive basic a.a., hydroxylated (Ser, thr), no negatively charged a.a. Amphipathic TOM: Translocon Outer Membrane Receptor plus channel Antibodies inhibit translocation TIM: Translocon Inner Membrane Contact sites Molecular chaperon and chaperonin required for folding

21 To be transported the protein need to be unfolded Translocation requires ATP to maintain the protein unfolded in the cytosol and the matrix Energy as proton motive force (Electrochemical gradient)- move positive charged a.a. in transit peptide (Electrophoresed)

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23 Transferred general import pore of the outer membrane (Tom20/22)

24 Path A:Stop transfer sequence block transfer through Tim23/17 channel and is moved laterally Path B: Uses Oxa1 to embed the protein into the inner membrane Path C: multipass protein with six membrane-spanning domains. No N-transit peptide Recognized by Tom70

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28 First interaction with the general import pore (Tom40) Then Transfer to the sorting and assemble machinery complex (SAM)

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30 Folded proteins are transported PTS in the C-terminal No removal of PTS

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34 Nuclear pore complex Nuclear localization signal Cytosolic protein required for transport

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38 Nuclear Import

39 Ras dependent nuclear export

40 Ras independent nuclear export

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