Biophysical Society Thematic Meeting | Bucharest 2026
Biophysics of Membrane Reactions in Brian
Tuesday Speaker Abstracts
HOW THE TWIN-ARGININE TRANSLOCASE (TAT) SYSTEM TRANSPORTS FOLDED PROTEINS ACROSS MEMBRANES WITHOUT LEAKING PROTONS? Leonid Sazanov Institute of Science and Technology Austria, Klosterneuburg, Austria How the twin-arginine translocase (Tat) system transports fully folded substrate proteins across cellular membranes without disrupting membrane integrity has been a fundamental question in cell biology for decades. The Tat system recognizes cargo signal peptide via a conserved twin arginine motif and is found in prokaryotes and plant organelles. Multi-subunit Tat complex facilitates proton motive force-dependent translocation process, yet its overall architecture remains unknown. We have solved an atomic cryo-EM structure of a E. coli trimeric TatB ₃ C ₃ complex bound to the substrate SufI. The complex adopts an unusual wide-open, bowl-shaped architecture with a polar inner cavity. Unexpectedly, the cargo is engaged in a dual-contact mode: while the signal peptide binds inside one TatBC unit, the folded domain docks tightly onto an adjacent unit. The structure offers a mechanistic framework for substrate engagement and translocation by the Tat system, suggesting a direct involvement of the entire Tat complex in substrate translocation.
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