Membrane protein insertion through a mitochondrial β-barrel gate.
Alexandra I C HöhrCaroline LindauChristophe WirthJian QiuDavid Arthur StroudStephan KutikBernard GuiardCarola HunteThomas BeckerNikolaus PfannerNils WiedemannPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2018)
The biogenesis of mitochondria, chloroplasts, and Gram-negative bacteria requires the insertion of β-barrel proteins into the outer membranes. Homologous Omp85 proteins are essential for membrane insertion of β-barrel precursors. It is unknown if precursors are threaded through the Omp85-channel interior and exit laterally or if they are translocated into the membrane at the Omp85-lipid interface. We have mapped the interaction of a precursor in transit with the mitochondrial Omp85-channel Sam50 in the native membrane environment. The precursor is translocated into the channel interior, interacts with an internal loop, and inserts into the lateral gate by β-signal exchange. Transport through the Omp85-channel interior followed by release through the lateral gate into the lipid phase may represent a basic mechanism for membrane insertion of β-barrel proteins.