Publication | Open Access
Formation of a β-barrel membrane protein is catalyzed by the interior surface of the assembly machine protein BamA
65
Citations
59
References
2019
Year
Protein AssemblyBiomolecular Structure PredictionBama Interior SurfaceMolecular BiologyAnalytical UltracentrifugationProtein RefoldingProtein FoldingMulti-protein AssemblyMacromolecular Assembliesβ-Barrel AssemblyBiochemistryMacromolecular MachineMembrane Biologyβ-Barrel Membrane ProteinStructural BiologyInterior SurfaceNatural Sciencesβ-Barrel Assembly MachineMedicine
The β-barrel assembly machine (Bam) complex in Gram-negative bacteria and its counterparts in mitochondria and chloroplasts fold and insert outer membrane β-barrel proteins. BamA, an essential component of the complex, is itself a β-barrel and is proposed to play a central role in assembling other barrel substrates. Here, we map the path of substrate insertion by the Bam complex using site-specific crosslinking to understand the molecular mechanisms that control β-barrel folding and release. We find that the C-terminal strand of the substrate is stably held by BamA and that the N-terminal strands of the substrate are assembled inside the BamA β-barrel. Importantly, we identify contacts between the assembling β-sheet and the BamA interior surface that determine the rate of substrate folding. Our results support a model in which the interior wall of BamA acts as a chaperone to catalyze β-barrel assembly.
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