The SecA adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) mediates extrusion of the amino termini of secreted proteins from the eubacterial cytosol based on cycles of reversible binding to the SecYEG translocon. We have determined the crystal structure of SecA with and without magnesium-adenosine diphosphate bound to the high-affinity ATPase site at 3.0 and 2.7 angstrom resolution, respectively. Candidate sites for preprotein binding are located on a surface containing the SecA epitopes exposed to the periplasm upon binding to SecYEG and are thus positioned to deliver preprotein to SecYEG. Comparisons with structurally related ATPases, including superfamily I and II ATP-dependent helicases, suggest that the interaction geometry of the tandem motor domains in SecA is modulated by nucleotide binding, which is shown by fluorescence anisotropy experiments to reverse an endothermic domain-dissociation reaction hypothesized to gate binding to SecYEG.
The SecA subunit of E. coli preprotein translocase promotes protein secretion during cycles of membrane insertion and deinsertion at SecYEG. This process is regulated both by nucleotide binding and hydrolysis and by the SecD and SecF proteins. In the presence of associated preprotein, the energy of ATP binding at nucleotide-binding domain 1 (NBD1) drives membrane insertion of a 30 kDa domain of SecA, while deinsertion of SecA requires the hydrolysis of this ATP. SecD and SecF stabilize the inserted state of SecA. ATP binding at NBD2, though needed for preprotein translocation, is not needed for SecA insertion or deinsertion.
Six putative ATP-binding motifs of SecA protein were altered by oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis to try to define the ATP-binding regions of this multifunctional protein. The effects of the mutations were analysed by genetic and biochemical assays. The results show that SecA contains two essential ATP-binding domains. One domain is responsible for high-affinity ATP binding and contains motifs A0 and B0, located at amino acid residues 102-109 and 198-210, respectively. A second domain is responsible for low-affinity ATP binding and contains motifs A3 and a predicted B motif located at amino acid residues 503-511 and 631-653, respectively. The ATP-binding properties of both domains were essential for SecA-dependent translocation ATPase and in vitro protein translocation activities. The significance of these findings for the mechanism of SecA-dependent protein translocation is discussed.
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