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标题: Disulfide bridge formation between SecY and a translocating polypeptide localize [打印本页]

作者: 飞鸟二世    时间: 2009-4-25 09:58     标题: Disulfide bridge formation between SecY and a translocating polypeptide localize

Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Department of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115
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# _# l- N6 ^' f' W/ Q: ^7 ^Abstract
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/ l# P+ ~' w! w9 R8 e9 v) v" d! mDuring their biosynthesis, many proteins pass through the membrane via a hydrophilic channel formed by the heterotrimeric Sec61/SecY complex. Whether this channel forms at the interface of multiple copies of Sec61/SecY or is intrinsic to a monomeric complex, as suggested by the recently solved X-ray structure of the Methanococcus jannaschii SecY complex, is a matter of contention. By introducing a single cysteine at various positions in Escherichia coli SecY and testing its ability to form a disulfide bond with a single cysteine in a translocating chain, we provide evidence that translocating polypeptides pass through the center of the SecY complex. The strongest cross-links were observed with residues that would form a constriction in an hourglass-shaped pore. This suggests that the channel makes only limited contact with a translocating polypeptide, thus minimizing the energy required for translocation.
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K.S. Cannon and E. Or contributed equally to this work.
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Abbreviation used in this paper: TM, transmembrane.
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Many proteins that are exported from the cytosol pass through a membrane channel into the ER in eukaryotes or the extracellular space in prokaryotes (for reviews see Rapoport et al., 1996; Pohlschroder et al., 1997; Matlack et al., 1998; Johnson and van Waes, 1999). The channel is formed by a heterotrimeric complex of proteins called the Sec61 complex in eukaryotes and the SecY complex in bacteria and archaea. The channel has a hydrophilic interior, as shown by electrophysiology and fluorescence lifetime measurements (Simon and Blobel, 1991; Crowley et al., 1994). Previous models assumed that the channel is formed at the interface between three or four copies of the Sec61/SecY complex (Hanein et al., 1996; Beckmann et al., 1997; Hamman et al., 1997; Manting et al., 2000; Menetret et al., 2000). However, the recently solved X-ray structure of the SecY complex from M. jannaschii is of a monomer with no exterior hydrophilic surfaces in the membrane (van den Berg et al., 2004); thus, the channel pore could not be formed by simple association of several Sec61/SecY complexes. The channel, visualized in a closed state in the X-ray structure, features a cytoplasmic funnel that is lined by a number of evolutionarily conserved hydrophilic residues. The funnel narrows to a close at a plug formed by a short helix (helix 2a) near the center of the membrane. It was postulated that when the channel opens, helix 2a swings outward, revealing an extracellular funnel which, combined with the cytoplasmic funnel, results in an hourglass-shaped pore (van den Berg et al., 2004). Translocating polypeptides would be threaded through a ring of hydrophobic residues at the neck of the hourglass before reaching the extracellular space. Although this is an attractive hypothesis, there is as yet no conclusive evidence that a translocating polypeptide passes through the center of the SecY complex.
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Cross-linking is the method of choice to identify residues in Sec61p/SecY that line the path of a translocating polypeptide chain through the membrane. So far, cross-linking has been performed at a rather crude level. Photo-activatible probes incorporated at different positions in a translocating polypeptide allowed the identification of Sec61p/SecY as the main component of the channel (Grlich et al., 1992; Musch et al., 1992; Sanders et al., 1992; High et al., 1993; Joly and Wickner, 1993; Mothes et al., 1994). In a more refined set of cross-linking experiments, probes were positioned in the signal sequence of prepro--factor. The site of cross-linking to Sec61p was mapped to individual transmembrane (TM) segments by the use of Sec61p mutants, each with a single protease cleavage site in a cytosolic or luminal loop (Plath et al., 1998). These experiments showed that the signal sequence binds specifically to TM segments 2 and 7. To identify TM segments that line the pore, a similar approach was tried with probes in the mature region of prepro--factor (Plath et al., 2004). Simultaneous cross-linking to several different TM segments of Sec61p was observed, making it difficult to derive any firm conclusions about the location of the pore.
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: N; a; N5 D  @2 kTo define the precise location of the pore, we introduced single cysteines at 30 positions in E. coli SecY, selected on the basis of the 3-D structure of the M. jannaschii SecY complex. We then tested which positions support formation of a disulfide bond with a cysteine on a translocating polypeptide in the channel. Our results show that the mature region of a translocating chain mainly contacts residues in the narrowest part of the hourglass-shaped pore, and support the idea that the translocation pore is located in the center of SecY, rather than at the interface of multiple SecY molecules.! Z' _+ |1 ?9 @: C% B& H
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Results and discussion
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Generating a translocation intermediate8 H8 w8 M9 e; B) N7 e5 T" S# g

, I6 f. M2 \. I: [. \9 k- K. |Our strategy was to introduce a single cysteine at select positions of SecY and test whether it could form a disulfide bridge with a cysteine in a translocating polypeptide chain. To increase the likelihood of bond formation, the polypeptide substrate was trapped in the channel by preventing its complete translocation with a bulky t-RNA/ribosome at the COOH terminus. This was accomplished by in vitro translation of a truncated mRNA coding for the first 220 aa of proOmpA (Fig. 1 A). The lack of a stop codon results in a nascent polypeptide chain associated with the ribosome as a peptidyl-tRNA (Gilmore and Blobel, 1985). The substrate (pOA220:tRNA) contained a single cysteine at position 175, which is expected to be inside the channel upon formation of the translocation intermediate (the COOH-terminal 36 residues of pOA220 are inside the ribosome).
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9 x' h8 j/ W, kWe first tested the ability of pOA220:tRNA to generate a translocation intermediate. For a control, pOA220:tRNA was treated with RNase to remove the tRNA, yielding a "standard" bacterial translocation substrate, pOA220 (Fig. 1 B, lane 1). In both cases the driving force for translocation was provided by the bacterial ATPase SecA and a protease-protection assay was used to confirm translocation. In the presence of SecA, ATP, and proteoliposomes containing purified E. coli SecY complex, the translocated free pOA220 was protected from proteolysis (Fig. 1 B, lane 4). In the absence of ATP or if Triton X-100 was added after translocation to solubilize the membranes, most of the labeled material was digested by the protease (Fig. 1 B, lanes 2 and 5, respectively). In the absence of RNase pretreatment, two major bands were visible (Fig. 1 B, lane 6); the top band is the peptidyl-tRNA (pOA220:tRNA), the bottom one (pOA220) lacks the tRNA moiety and is presumably freed by hydrolysis of the peptidyl-tRNA bond during translation or sample preparation. When tRNA-associated pOA was first translocated and then digested with protease, some full-length pOA220:tRNA was protected (Fig. 1 B, lane 9, topmost asterisk). These may be chains in which the bulky tRNA/ribosome closely abuts the channel and prevents the protease from cleaving. In addition, a number of fragments appeared that were smaller than pOA220 (Fig. 1 B, lane 9, asterisks), suggesting that the nascent chain may slide back into the cytosol, so that the protease can cleave at internal positions. It should be stressed that in this situation the ribosome functions solely as an obstacle; it does not move the polypeptide chain as in cotranslational translocation.
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Generation of a disulfide bridge to specific sites in SecY9 i* n+ ]' q5 m9 W9 Z- y

/ |: B0 _4 O' `7 X' L( p: \# uTo introduce single cysteines into E. coli SecY, we first mutated its two endogenous cysteines to serines (Fig. 3 A, underlined). Using the crystal structure of M. jannaschii and a sequence alignment of all known Sec61/SecY molecules as a guide, we next introduced single cysteine substitutions at 30 selected positions (Fig. 3 A). We then tested the translocation activity of the purified mutant SecY complexes after their reconstitution into proteoliposomes, using full-length proOmpA as a substrate (unpublished data). Five of the mutants (I82C, I86C, I189C, S323C, and F387C) had & U+ f0 G% z# e1 z
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Initial experiments revealed two SecY mutants, G69C and S282C, that gave efficient cross-links to pOA220:tRNA. We characterized these cross-links with a number of controls. A cross-linked band of the expected size was seen in the complete system (Fig. 2 A, lanes 1 and 6, arrowheads), but was missing in samples that lacked ATP (lanes 2 and 7), SecA (lanes 3 and 8), or the oxidizing agent (lanes 5 and 10). The cross-links were absent in samples that contained cysteine-free proOmpA (Fig. 2 A, lanes 4 and 9) or cysteine-free SecY (Fig. 2 B, lane 2), or that were generated with translocation substrate that lacked a signal sequence (Fig. 2 B, lane 10). The presence of SecY in the cross-linked product was confirmed by immunoprecipitation under denaturing conditions with purified anti-SecY antibodies (Fig. 2 C). When the samples were treated with RNase after cross-linking, the cross-linked product displayed an increased mobility, of 15 kD, as expected from loss of the tRNA moiety (Fig. 2 A, lane 12, labeled "pOA220xSecY"). If the translation mix was treated with RNase before translocation and cross-linking, this band was absent (lane 13), indicating that a fully translocated substrate does not form cross-links to SecY. Together, these results confirm that disulfide bond formation with an arrested translocation intermediate can be used to identify specific amino acids in SecY that surround the nascent chain.; c. [1 ^5 V3 m- S2 i

; ~) X; k$ G5 L# |3 xWhen wild-type SecA, which contains four endogenous cysteines, was used to generate the translocation intermediate, additional bands were seen above the cross-link to SecY (Fig. 2 B, lanes 1–4). These represent cross-links to SecA as they became fainter and decreased slightly in size if a truncated form of SecA, which lacks three of the four endogenous cysteines (N95), was used (Fig. 2 B, lanes 5 and 6). The SecA cross-links disappeared completely if the remaining cysteine was mutated (Fig. 2 B, lanes 7 and 8). We used this cysteine-free mutant in the remainder of our experiments.' f- i# e# d5 M9 v& R3 `
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We next generated translocation intermediates of varying lengths, keeping the cysteine at position 175, and compared their ability to form cross-links with a cysteine at several positions in SecY. Cross-links to S282C were observed with a chain length of 211 aa, but not with chains of 183 or 200 residues (unpublished data), in which Cys175 is expected to be inside the ribosome. With a chain of 229 residues (pOA229), positions 76, 79, 131, and 194 gave similar cross-links as with pOA220, but the intensity was lower (Fig. 2 D, 1–13). Most cross-links disappeared at a chain length of 293 aa (Fig. 2 D, lanes 14–18). Weak cross-links were still detectable with position S282C (Fig. 2 D, lane 19), presumably because random back and forth movements of the translocating substrate occasionally position Cys175 inside the channel. Because pOA220 gave the most efficient cross-links, it was used in more extensive screens for positions in SecY that interact with the nascent chain.. |/ N& n/ P2 Z
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Screening SecY for interaction sites with the translocating polypeptide2 Y9 e+ u/ C& ]- e  y% j

' ]! e3 ?2 b. \: S% @We first tested positions in the interior of SecY, choosing residues that would form the neck of the postulated hourglass-shaped channel, as well as residues above and below the constriction. Six of the chosen positions〞G69 in TM2a, I191 in TM5, I278 and S282 in TM7, as well as T404 and I408 in TM10〞gave the strongest cross-links to SecY (Fig. 3 B). Immunoprecipitation with anti-SecY antibodies confirmed the identity of these cross-links (Fig. 3 C). Weaker cross-links to several other positions were also seen, particularly to Q93, I187, H264, K268, and F286 (Fig. 3 B). As expected, SecY complex lacking cysteines (0Cys) failed to give cross-links. We next tested positions on the exterior of the molecule, choosing residues that would be expected to be near the middle of the membrane, facing the outside of the SecY complex and encircling the perimeter (G28, V126, V162, A193, A229, and V413). None of these positions gave significant cross-links (Fig. 3 D). Likewise, no cross-links were observed with wild-type SecY (WT), which contains cysteines at positions 329 and 385 (Fig. 3 D). These positions are located on the exterior of SecY near the middle of the membrane, but do not point directly outwards. Together, these results indicate that the translocation pore is located in the interior of the SecY complex.
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/ j4 _( Q. p* r9 L% W4 SWe used a ribosome as a bulky object to halt posttranslational translocation of a polypeptide because it minimized the aggregation of the substrate. However, similar cross-linking results were obtained in experiments using a purified proOmpA fragment (227 aa), which contained a 13–amino acid long disulfide-bonded loop at its COOH terminus to stop translocation (Tani et al., 1990), and a free cysteine at position 175 (Fig. S1, available at http://www.jcb.org/cgi/content/full/jcb.200412019/DC1).
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Conclusions# @1 }0 P8 C' y4 g7 r. D
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Our data support the idea that an internal cavity in SecY forms the pore of the protein-conducting channel. The six strongest cross-linked positions cluster in the center of the SecY molecule (Fig. 4, A and B). Three of the six residues–I191C, I278C, and I408C–are part of an isoleucine ring that is at the neck of the hourglass-shaped pore in the postulated open state of the channel (van den Berg et al., 2004). Weaker cross-links to a fourth member of the ring, I187C were also seen. Links to these residues and to S282C and T404C, which are directly below the ring on the periplasmic side of the channel, provide evidence that the isoleucine ring surrounds the translocating nascent chain. This finding is consistent with the proposal that the hydrophobic ring fits like a gasket around the translocating chain, providing a simple means of preventing ions and other small molecules from flooding through the channel (van den Berg et al., 2004). We consider it significant that the strongest cross-links of the translocating chain were seen with residues located at the narrowest point of the postulated hourglass-shaped channel. Restricting the interactions between a substrate and the channel to a narrow zone may minimize the energy required for a protein to cross the membrane.
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Note that five of the strong cross-links (G69, I191, I278, S282, I408) come from positions at which signal sequence suppressor (prlA) mutations have been observed. These are thought to facilitate the opening of the channel and thus allow the translocation of proteins with altered signal sequences (Emr et al., 1981; Bankaitis et al., 1984). Our data suggest that residues that contact a translocating chain play an important role in channel gating.# n4 i! x) N/ H* V

( a/ X2 O: T, WIn the closed channel visualized by the crystal structure, the residue in M. jannaschii that corresponds to E. coli G69 is located at the upper end of helix 2a (the plug), pointing away from the center of the molecule. However, in the open state of the channel, modeled on the basis of experiments that showed disulfide bridge formation between E. coli SecY residue 67 and a position in SecE near the luminal face of the membrane (Harris and Silhavy, 1999), the side chain of residue 69 would point toward the interior of the channel (van den Berg et al., 2004). The strong cross-linking seen with G69 thus supports the idea that the plug moves to provide a path for the polypeptide chain through the channel.- U- `, a. I+ ~9 a6 c+ A
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We cannot rule out the possibility that multiple SecY molecules open and combine their hydrophilic inner surfaces to form a channel. However, upon solubilization of a translocation intermediate in detergent, only one SecY was found to be associated with one copy each of SecA and proOmpA (Duong, 2003). Thus, a far simpler interpretation of our data is that a single SecY molecule forms the pore (van den Berg et al., 2004).
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Materials and methods
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Single-cysteine derivatives of SecY( q* I7 P0 \- C  U: P3 e- r% M0 c; n9 V7 v1 t
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A version of SecY lacking cysteine was generated and single cysteine codons were subsequently introduced at various positions through PCR-based mutagenesis (QuikChange; Stratagene) of pBAD-EhisYG (Collinson et al., 2001). The expression of these constructs in C43 (DE3) cells was induced with arabinose for 3 h at 30°C. Complexes were purified after solubilization of the membranes in 1.25% n-dodecyl--D-maltopyranoside (Anatrace) by binding to a Ni2 -chelating column, followed by cation exchange chromatography (MonoS; van den Berg et al., 2004). Protein concentrations were determined with the Bradford reagent (Bio-Rad Laboratories). Purified SecY derivatives in TNG buffer (10 mM Tris-Cl, pH 8.0, 150 mM NaCl, 10% glycerol, 10 mM DTT, 0.03% n-dodecyl--D-maltopyranoside) were stored at –80°C.
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7 \; s' ?! i+ R0 z* s; b1 NPreparation of proteoliposomes, cross-linking experiments and translocation assays  M9 _9 e  Y6 c# [  |: B
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Purified SecY mutants (16.8 μg) in 16.8 μl TNG buffer were reconstituted into phospholipid vesicles as described previously (Collinson et al., 2001).
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Shortened DNA templates coding for proOmpA (pOA) with a glycine to cysteine substitution at amino acid 175 and lacking a stop codon were generated by PCR with appropriate primers and used to make mRNA by in vitro transcription with SP6 polymerase. Truncated pOA fragments (pOA#:tRNA, where # represents the last amino acid present in the truncated protein) were synthesized in the presence of [35S]methionine by in vitro translation (Rabbit Reticulocyte Lysate; Promega) for 20 min at 30°C. Where indicated, translation mixtures were depleted of ATP by incubation with 20 mM glucose and 0.2 U/μl hexokinase (15 min at 30°C). Except where samples were treated with RNase, all buffers contained 1 U/μl SUPERase-In (Ambion). When tRNA was removed before cross-linking, samples were treated with 1/50 volume of RNase Cocktail (Ambion) for 5 min at 30°C. When RNase digestions were performed after cross-linking, samples were treated for 30 min at 37°C with one-third volume RNase Cocktail supplemented with 0.01 U/μl RNase V1 (Ambion) and 3% Triton X-100.9 w. }* o+ ]4 x5 v5 Y0 B
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To generate an arrested translocation intermediate, 1.8 μl proteoliposomes containing SecY complex were mixed with 1 μl in vitro–translated 35S-pOA220:tRNA and 1 μg of cysteine-free (except where otherwise indicated) SecA (Osborne et al., 2004) in 7.2 μl of buffer. Final concentrations were 50 mM KCl, 50 mM Hepes, pH 7.5, 1.8% glycerol, 5 mM MgCl2, 0.5 mg/ml acetylated BSA (B-2518; Sigma-Aldrich), and 4 mM ATP. After 15 min of incubation at 37°C, samples were mixed with 90 μl SM buffer (150 mM NaCl, 5 mM MgCl2, 10 mM Hepes, pH 7.5) containing 2 mg/ml acetylated BSA and pelleted at 14,000 rpm for 15 min at 4°C. Pellets were washed with 100 μl ST buffer (150 mM NaCl, 5 mM MgCl2, 10 mM Tris, pH 8), resuspended in 10 μl ST buffer containing 0.1 mM sodium tetrathionate (Sigma-Aldrich) and incubated for 10 min at 37°C. N-ethylmaleimide (Sigma-Aldrich) was added to 20 mM for 5 min on ice. Samples were then solubilized for 3 min at 40°C with 3 μl of 5x sample buffer (250 mM MES, pH 6.5, 25% glycerol, 10% SDS, 0.25 mg/ml bromophenol blue). Translocation assays using samples resuspended in 10 μl ST buffer without tetrathionate were performed as described previously (Or et al., 2002). Samples were separated on NuPage 10% Bis-Tris mini-gels (Invitrogen) with MES running buffer, visualized, and quantified by phosphorimaging (Fujix BAS 2000). Linear background subtraction and cropping of images was performed with Adobe Photoshop.* E( E; q- S. t: V0 v2 D

8 {6 `" I/ f; v  g, T* N. AAnalysis of cross-linked products
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1 P5 h  M- N, J/ H' s) h4 uFor immunoprecipitations, pellets were dissolved in 10 μl 8 M urea plus 1% SDS in SM buffer, heated to 40°C for 10 min, diluted 20-fold with 1% Triton X-100 in SM buffer then mixed with bead-bound purified antibodies directed against a COOH-terminal SecY peptide or an unrelated control peptide. After 1 h of incubation at 4°C the beads were washed three times with 1% Triton X-100 in SM buffer and bound proteins were eluted with sample buffer.
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6 |* U% C" l# H3 u, l/ cOnline supplemental material
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. N( \! y. N! RAcknowledgments
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0 g" a$ J' p$ V- \* p9 EThanks to Drs. Wendy Garrett, Tommy Kirchhausen, Andrew Osborne, and Pamela Wearsch for critical reading of the manuscript. We thank Andrew Osborne (T. Rapoport's laboratory) for the cysteine-free SecA mutant.5 O% U' R" I' b  v7 c* j
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This work was supported by a National Institutes of Health grant to T.A. Rapoport. K.S. Cannon is a Richard D. Frisbee III Foundation Fellow of the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. W.M. Clemons Jr. has a fellowship from the Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation. T.A. Rapoport is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator.$ ?3 v& K0 s. w
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6 j* h6 }$ A' `/ o; BOsborne, A.R., W.M. Clemons Jr., and T.A. Rapoport. 2004. A large conformational change of the translocation ATPase SecA. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 101: 10937–10942.  M- E. y3 B% `; h) p- ]
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Plath, K., W. Mothes, B.M. Wilkinson, C.J. Stirling, and T.A. Rapoport. 1998. Signal sequence recognition in posttranslational protein transport across the yeast ER membrane. Cell. 94:795–807.
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Plath, K., B.M. Wilkinson, C.J. Stirling, and T.A. Rapoport. 2004. Interactions between Sec complex and prepro-alpha-factor during posttranslational protein transport into the endoplasmic reticulum. Mol. Biol. Cell. 15:1–10.
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+ I' j' i# s' V, g, P) X# G) v9 o1 bPohlschroder, M., W.A. Prinz, E. Hartmann, and J. Beckwith. 1997. Protein translocation in the three domains of life: variations on a theme. Cell. 91:563–566., X, c8 w2 v+ f% I
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Rapoport, T.A., B. Jungnickel, and U. Kutay. 1996. Protein transport across the eukaryotic endoplasmic reticulum and bacterial inner membranes. Annu. Rev. Biochem. 65:271–303.. [( M! c& Y) W, X8 n* Q

7 n% M( F0 d/ h  X0 G  [: M1 nSanders, S.L., K.M. Whitfield, J.P. Vogel, M.D. Rose, and R.W. Schekman. 1992. Sec61p and BiP directly facilitate polypeptide translocation into the ER. Cell. 69:353–365.+ ^8 R. k7 |' c/ l  @

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! C! l% |. b$ x" o# f; \8 p  \3 @van den Berg, B., W.M. Clemons Jr., I. Collinson, Y. Modis, E. Hartmann, S.C. Harrison, and T.A. Rapoport. 2004. X-ray structure of a protein-conducting channel. Nature. 427:36–44.(Kurt S. Cannon, Eran Or, )
作者: 我心飞翔    时间: 2015-5-25 20:01

做一个,做好了,请看  
作者: 张佳    时间: 2015-6-9 08:10

一个人最大的破产是绝望,最大的资产是希望。  
作者: 昕昕    时间: 2015-7-8 20:27

彪悍的人生不需要解释。  
作者: haha3245    时间: 2015-7-19 13:28

不对,就是碗是铁的,里边没饭你吃啥去?  
作者: foxok    时间: 2015-7-29 09:27

今天再看下  
作者: haha3245    时间: 2015-8-4 09:01

不错啊! 一个字牛啊!  
作者: bluesuns    时间: 2015-8-6 10:02

干细胞研究还要面向临床
作者: awen    时间: 2015-8-20 08:43

初来乍到,请多多关照。。。  
作者: txxxtyq    时间: 2015-9-9 18:13

家财万贯还得回很多贴哦  
作者: 红旗    时间: 2015-9-10 19:01

做对的事情比把事情做对重要。  
作者: tuanzi    时间: 2015-9-18 14:54

继续查找干细胞研究资料
作者: tempo    时间: 2015-10-8 06:32

佩服佩服啊.  
作者: 我心飞翔    时间: 2015-10-22 17:01

顶你一下.  
作者: s06806    时间: 2015-11-27 15:35

初来乍到,请多多关照。。。嘿嘿,回个贴表明我来过。  
作者: aakkaa    时间: 2015-12-12 19:27

dddddddddddddd  
作者: 昕昕    时间: 2015-12-14 13:35

又看了一次  
作者: xuguofeng    时间: 2015-12-27 13:43

哈哈 瞧你说的~~~  
作者: marysyq    时间: 2015-12-28 22:05

真是有你的!  
作者: biobio    时间: 2016-1-12 17:10

有空一起交流一下  
作者: 陈晴    时间: 2016-2-2 00:09

哈哈 瞧你说的~~~  
作者: biobio    时间: 2016-2-4 13:34

青春就像卫生纸。看着挺多的,用着用着就不够了。  
作者: 我心飞翔    时间: 2016-3-22 15:01

楼上的稍等啦  
作者: 黄山    时间: 2016-4-17 19:35

偶真幸运哦...  
作者: yunshu    时间: 2016-4-29 15:54

晕死也不多加点分  
作者: awen    时间: 2016-5-4 11:27

偶真幸运哦...  
作者: 快乐小郎    时间: 2016-5-11 09:35

你加油吧  
作者: 某某人    时间: 2016-6-8 09:54

干细胞行业门户 干细胞之家
作者: 我心飞翔    时间: 2016-6-9 21:00

要不我崇拜你?行吗?  
作者: frogsays    时间: 2016-6-10 21:16

嘿嘿......哈哈......呵呵.....哟~呼  
作者: 8666sea    时间: 2016-6-26 18:29

不错 不错  比我强多了  
作者: 三星    时间: 2016-7-2 19:34

哈哈,这么多的人都回了,我敢不回吗?赶快回一个,很好的,我喜欢  
作者: 水木清华    时间: 2016-8-30 21:35

不错的东西  持续关注  
作者: marysyq    时间: 2016-9-3 11:17

支持一下  
作者: ines    时间: 2016-9-15 16:41

好人一生平安  
作者: bluesuns    时间: 2016-9-18 17:35

写得好啊  
作者: 龙水生    时间: 2016-9-21 11:27

一楼的位置好啊..  
作者: 3344555    时间: 2016-10-3 22:06

哈哈,看的人少,回一下  
作者: 未必温暖    时间: 2016-10-24 21:22

谢谢楼主啊!
作者: 20130827    时间: 2016-11-4 20:35

努力,努力,再努力!!!!!!!!!!!  
作者: pspvp    时间: 2016-12-25 14:17

楼上的话等于没说~~~  
作者: dongmei    时间: 2016-12-29 12:53

dc-cik nk  
作者: 8666sea    时间: 2017-1-12 03:43

支持一下  
作者: Kuo    时间: 2017-1-12 07:25

心脏干细胞
作者: beautylive    时间: 2017-2-1 00:28

彪悍的人生不需要解释。  
作者: 干细胞2014    时间: 2017-2-18 10:54

设置阅读啊  
作者: abc987    时间: 2017-2-22 05:06

好帖子,要顶!
作者: 知足常乐    时间: 2017-2-23 15:15

慢慢来,呵呵  
作者: 王者之道    时间: 2017-3-15 05:08

哈哈 瞧你说的~~~  
作者: kaikai    时间: 2017-3-30 10:27

努力,努力,再努力!!!!!!!!!!!  
作者: cjms    时间: 2017-4-10 07:21

呵呵 都没人想我~~  
作者: 锦锦乐道    时间: 2017-4-15 07:25

好啊,,不错、、、、  
作者: pengzy    时间: 2017-5-25 17:27

(*^__^*) 嘻嘻……   
作者: 刘先生    时间: 2017-6-8 09:01

赚点分不容易啊  
作者: 锦锦乐道    时间: 2017-6-24 16:19

看贴回复是好习惯  
作者: 快乐小郎    时间: 2017-6-26 07:55

回答了那么多,没有加分了,郁闷。。  
作者: frogsays    时间: 2017-7-9 13:18

晕死也不多加点分  
作者: 大小年    时间: 2017-7-30 15:18

天啊. 很好的资源
作者: happyboy    时间: 2017-8-6 08:10

琴棋书画不会,洗衣做饭嫌累。  
作者: frogsays    时间: 2017-8-12 16:53

表观遗传学
作者: feixue66    时间: 2017-8-19 23:31

干细胞存储  
作者: 石头111    时间: 2017-8-22 06:54

世界上那些最容易的事情中,拖延时间最不费力。  
作者: 龙水生    时间: 2017-8-25 13:59

哈哈,这么多的人都回了,我敢不回吗?赶快回一个,很好的,我喜欢  
作者: dreamenjoyer    时间: 2017-8-31 01:53

不错不错.,..我喜欢  
作者: frogsays    时间: 2017-8-31 06:54

对不起,我走错地方了,呵呵  
作者: Whole    时间: 2017-11-5 16:10

顶的就是你  
作者: txxxtyq    时间: 2017-11-25 22:22

设置阅读啊  
作者: 科研人    时间: 2017-12-10 19:14

先看看怎么样!  
作者: 分子工程师    时间: 2017-12-19 08:08

经过你的指点 我还是没找到在哪 ~~~  
作者: 生物小菜鸟    时间: 2017-12-20 17:16

回贴赚学识,不错了  
作者: 8666sea    时间: 2017-12-28 19:10

好啊,谢楼主
作者: 咖啡功夫猫    时间: 2018-1-17 18:26

努力~~各位。。。  
作者: 温暖暖    时间: 2018-1-30 03:10

做对的事情比把事情做对重要。  
作者: 干细胞2014    时间: 2018-2-16 09:41

生殖干细胞
作者: kaikai    时间: 2018-2-23 23:18

好啊,,不错、、、、  
作者: doors    时间: 2018-2-25 06:28

知道了 不错~~~  
作者: 修复者    时间: 2018-2-26 03:16

不早了 各位晚安~~~~  
作者: 小小C    时间: 2018-4-6 18:21

支持你就顶你  
作者: 三好学生    时间: 2018-4-20 11:17

我十目一行也还是看不懂啊  
作者: 温暖暖    时间: 2018-4-27 17:34

支持~~顶顶~~~  
作者: renee    时间: 2018-5-3 16:30

干细胞研究重在基础
作者: 蝶澈    时间: 2018-5-5 02:36

偶啥时才能熬出头啊.  
作者: 锦锦乐道    时间: 2018-6-14 13:18

长时间没来看了 ~~  
作者: 刘先生    时间: 2018-7-25 13:18

羊水干细胞
作者: MIYAGI    时间: 2018-8-7 12:54

回答了那么多,没有加分了,郁闷。。  
作者: vsill    时间: 2018-8-13 18:18

帮你项项吧  
作者: beautylive    时间: 2018-8-14 13:44

哈哈 我支持你
作者: 旅美学者    时间: 2018-8-14 23:03

正好你开咯这样的帖  
作者: Diary    时间: 2018-8-18 15:58

赚点分不容易啊  
作者: kaikai    时间: 2018-9-20 04:46

你加油吧  
作者: dr_ji    时间: 2018-10-18 23:39

这个站不错!!  
作者: apple0    时间: 2018-10-20 15:43

终于看完了~~~  
作者: keanuc    时间: 2018-10-23 00:59

呵呵,等着就等着....  
作者: Kuo    时间: 2018-10-23 15:54

我有家的感觉~~你知道吗  
作者: biopxl    时间: 2018-11-2 21:09

世界上那些最容易的事情中,拖延时间最不费力。  
作者: 蚂蚁    时间: 2018-11-8 10:43

肌源性干细胞
作者: IPS干细胞    时间: 2018-11-17 19:20

我来看看!谢谢  
作者: 我心飞翔    时间: 2018-11-26 21:42

初来乍到,请多多关照。。。嘿嘿,回个贴表明我来过。  
作者: haha3245    时间: 2018-11-28 10:36

干细胞行业  
作者: 快乐小郎    时间: 2018-12-1 01:36

淋巴细胞




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