Protein SRP54 is an essential component of eukaryotic
signal recognition particle (SRP). The methionine-rich
M-domain (SRP54M or 54M) interacts with the SRP RNA and
is also involved in the binding to signal peptides of secretory
proteins during their targeting to cellular membranes.
To gain insight into the molecular details of SRP-mediated
protein targeting, we studied the human 54M polypeptide.
The recombinant human protein was expressed successfully
in Escherichia coli and was purified to homogeneity.
Our studies determined the sites that were susceptible
to limited proteolysis, with the goal to design smaller
functional mutant derivatives that lacked nonessential
amino acid residues from both termini. Of the four polypeptides
produced by V8 protease or chymotrypsin, 54MM-2 was the
shortest (120 residues; Mr = 13,584.8),
but still contained the conserved amino acids suggested
to associate with the signal peptide or the SRP RNA. 54MM-2
was cloned, expressed, purified to homogeneity, and was
shown to bind human SRP RNA in the presence of protein
SRP19, indicating that it was functional. Highly reproducible
conditions for the crystallization of 54MM-2 were established.
Examination of the crystals by X-ray diffraction showed
an orthorhombic unit cell of dimensions a = 29.127
Å, b = 63.693 Å, and c =
129.601 Å, in space group P212121,
with reflections extending to at least 2.0 Å.