Iniciar sesión

Signal sequences are short amino acid sequences that guide newly synthesized proteins to their proper location within the cell. Classical signal sequences are fifteen to sixty amino acids long and present at the N-terminus of a polypeptide chain. Each signal sequence has a conserved segment of basic residues towards their N terminus, a hydrophobic core, and a C-terminus rich in polar residues. The C-terminus also contains a signal cleavage site and features a -3 -1 sequence motif. The -3-1 sequence motif contains amino acids with short side chains such as alanine at -1 and uncharged residues at -3 positions, relative to the signal cleavage site (considered position 0).

Cellular organelles contain sorting receptors that recognize the sorting signals and guide the cargo into the correct compartment. Sorting receptors can be soluble such as the nuclear receptors, or membrane-bound, as observed in mitochondria, chloroplast, ER, and peroxisomes. After the proteins are delivered to their proper location, the sorting receptors are recycled back for multiple rounds of protein sorting.

Inside the organelle, signal peptidases cleave the signal sequences of the newly delivered protein at their signal cleavage site. Some signal sequences are present internally within the polypeptide and remain permanently associated without being cleaved off, as found in many nuclear proteins. Furthermore, some signal sequences are rich in hydrophobic amino acid residues that help to anchor transmembrane proteins. Such signal sequences are called signal-anchor sequences. Mutations or removal of signal sequences leads to defective routing of proteins and are associated with physiological conditions such as inherited kidney diseases, autoimmune diseases, cardiovascular diseases, and several metabolic disorders.

Tags
Signal SequencesSorting ReceptorsAmino Acid SequencesN terminusPolypeptide ChainConserved SegmentBasic ResiduesHydrophobic CorePolar ResiduesSignal Cleavage Site3 1 Sequence MotifCellular OrganellesSoluble ReceptorsMembrane bound ReceptorsProtein SortingSignal PeptidasesNuclear ProteinsHydrophobic Amino Acid Residues

Del capítulo 16:

article

Now Playing

16.2 : Secuencias señal y receptores de distribución

Compartimentos intracelulares y distribución de proteínas

4.9K Vistas

article

16.1 : Resumen de la distribución y el tráfico de proteínas

Compartimentos intracelulares y distribución de proteínas

10.1K Vistas

article

16.3 : Distribución de proteínas nucleares

Compartimentos intracelulares y distribución de proteínas

4.2K Vistas

article

16.4 : Señales de localización nuclear e importación

Compartimentos intracelulares y distribución de proteínas

5.3K Vistas

article

16.5 : Exportación nuclear

Compartimentos intracelulares y distribución de proteínas

3.5K Vistas

article

16.6 : Direccionalidad del transporte nuclear

Compartimentos intracelulares y distribución de proteínas

2.9K Vistas

article

16.7 : Regulación de la distribución de proteínas nucleares

Compartimentos intracelulares y distribución de proteínas

2.3K Vistas

article

16.8 : Distribución de proteínas mitocondriales

Compartimentos intracelulares y distribución de proteínas

4.0K Vistas

article

16.9 : Precursores de las proteínas mitocondriales

Compartimentos intracelulares y distribución de proteínas

2.4K Vistas

article

16.10 : Translocación de proteínas en la mitocondria

Compartimentos intracelulares y distribución de proteínas

2.9K Vistas

article

16.11 : Aporte de energía para la translocación

Compartimentos intracelulares y distribución de proteínas

2.0K Vistas

article

16.12 : Estructura de las porinas

Compartimentos intracelulares y distribución de proteínas

2.8K Vistas

article

16.13 : Inserción de las porinas en la membrana mitocondrial externa

Compartimentos intracelulares y distribución de proteínas

2.6K Vistas

article

16.14 : Transporte proteico en la membrana mitocondrial interna

Compartimentos intracelulares y distribución de proteínas

3.5K Vistas

article

16.15 : Transporte de proteínas a los tilacoides

Compartimentos intracelulares y distribución de proteínas

2.2K Vistas

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacidad

Condiciones de uso

Políticas

Investigación

Educación

ACERCA DE JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Todos los derechos reservados