BIOL 3450 Chapter 13: Chapter 13 – Moving Proteins into Membranes and Organelles

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18 Feb 2019
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Chapter 13 moving proteins into membranes and organelles: delivery of newly synthesized proteins to their roper cellular destinations (protein targeting or sorting, targeting of newly synthesized protein from cytoplasm to intracellular organelle. 13. 1 targeting proteins to and across er membrane: er is where most membrane proteins are assembled. Hydrophobic n terminal signal sequence targets nascent secretory proteins to er: cotranslational translocation ~ transport of most secretory proteins into er lumen begins while incompletely synthesized (nascent) protein is still bound to ribosome. Cotranslational translocation is initiated by two gtp hydrolyzing proteins: signal recognition particle (srp) ~ cytosolic ribonucleoprotein particle that transiently binds to both er signal sequence in nascent protein and large (60s) ribosomal subunit, forming large complex. Passage of growing polypeptides through translocon is driven by translation: translocon ~ complex of proteins that forms channel within er membrane. In bacteria, driving force for post translational translocation comes from seca (cytosolic atpase that pushes polypeptides through translocon channel)

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