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      ProOmpA spontaneously folds in a membrane assembly competent state which trigger factor stabilizes.

      The EMBO Journal
      Adenosine Triphosphate, metabolism, Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins, Bacterial Proteins, Biological Transport, Cell Membrane, Escherichia coli, Protein Conformation, Protein Precursors, Protein Processing, Post-Translational

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          Abstract

          The precursor protein proOmpA can translocate across purified Escherichia coli inner membrane vesicles in the absence of any other soluble proteins. ProOmpA, purified 2000-fold in the presence of 8 M urea, is competent for translocation following rapid renaturation via dilution. ATP, the transmembrane electrochemical potential, and functional secY protein are essential for the translocation of proOmpA renatured by dilution. The kinetics of its translocation and the level of translocation at each concentration of ATP are indistinguishable from that of proOmpA renatured by dialysis with trigger factor. After dilution, the proOmpA rapidly loses its competence for membrane assembly. However, this competence is stabilized by trigger factor. Assembly-competent proOmpA is in a protease-sensitive conformation, whereas proOmpA which has lost this competence is more resistant to degradation. This suggests that the primary role for trigger factor in in vitro protein translocation is to maintain precursor proteins in a translocation-competent conformation. We propose that a properly folded precursor protein and ATP are the only soluble components which are essential for bacterial protein translocation.

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