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P. Haffter  T. W. McMullin    T. D. Fox 《Genetics》1990,125(3):495-503
Translation of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondrial mRNA encoding cytochrome c oxidase subunit III (coxIII) specifically requires the products of at least three nuclear genes, PET122, PET494 and PET54. pet122 mutations that remove 24-67 amino acid residues from the carboxyterminus of the gene product were found to be suppressed by unlinked nuclear mutations. These unlinked suppressors fail to suppress both a pet122 missense mutation and a complete pet122 deletion. One of the suppressor mutations causes a heat-sensitive nonrespiratory growth phenotype in an otherwise wild-type strain and reduces translation of all mitochondrial gene products in cells grown at high temperature. This suppressor maps to a newly identified gene on chromosome XV termed PET123. The sequence of a DNA fragment carrying PET123 contains one major open reading frame encoding a basic protein of 318 amino acids. Inactivation of the chromosomal copy of PET123 by interruption of this open reading frame causes cells to become rho- (sustain large deletions in their mtDNA). This phenotype is characteristic for null alleles of genes whose products are essential for general mitochondrial protein synthesis. Thus our data strongly suggest that the PET123 protein is a component of the mitochondrial translation apparatus that interacts directly with the coxIII-mRNA-specific translational activator PET122.  相似文献   

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P. Haffter  T. W. McMullin    T. D. Fox 《Genetics》1991,127(2):319-326
Expression of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondrial gene coding cytochrome c oxidase subunit III is specifically activated at the level of translation by at least three nuclear genes, PET122, PET494 and PET54. We have shown previously that carboxy-terminal deletions of PET122 are allele-specifically suppressed by mutations in an unlinked nuclear gene, termed PET123, that encodes a small subunit ribosomal protein. Here we describe additional pet122 suppressors generated by mutations in a second gene which we show to be the previously identified nuclear gene MRP1. Like PET123, MRP1 encodes a component of the small subunit of mitochondrial ribosomes. Our mrp1 mutations are allele-specific suppressors of carboxyl-terminal truncations of the PET122 protein and do not bypass the requirement for residual function of PET122. None of our mrp1 mutations has an intrinsic phenotype in an otherwise wild-type background. However, some of the mrp1 mutations cause a non-conditional respiratory-defective phenotype in combination with certain pet123 alleles. This synthetic defective phenotype suggests that the ribosomal proteins PET123 and MRP1 interact functionally with each other. The fact that they can both mutate to suppress certain alleles of the mRNA-specific translational activator PET122 strongly suggests that the PET122 protein promotes translation of the coxIII mRNA via an interaction with the small subunit of mitochondrial ribosomes.  相似文献   

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Summary Mitochondrial translation of the cob mRNA to yield apocytochrome b is specifically dependent on the nuclear gene CBS1, while mitochondrial translation of the oxi2 mRNA to yield cytochrome oxidase subunit III (cox III) is specifically dependent on the nuclear gene PET494. Chimeric oxi2 mRNAs bearing the 5 leaders of other mitochondrial mRNAs, transcribed from rho - mitochondrial DNAs termed MSU494, are translated in pet494 mutants. In this study, we examined translation of coxIII from MSU494-encoded chimeric mRNAs in zygotes of defined nuclear and mitochondrial genotype. CoxIII was translated from a chimeric mRNA bearing the cob leader only when the zygotes contained a wild-type CBS1 gene. CoxIII translation from an mRNA bearing the 5 leader of the mitochondrial gene aap1 was not dependent on CBS1 activity. We conclude that the product of the nuclear gene CBS1, or something under its control, acts in the mitochondrion on the cob mRNA 5 leader to activate translation of downstream coding sequences.  相似文献   

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Mitochondrial translation of the mRNA encoding cytochrome c oxidase subunit III (coxIII) specifically requires the action of three position activator proteins encoded in the nucleus of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Some mutations affecting one of these activators, PET122, can be suppressed by mutations in an unlinked nuclear gene termed PET123. PET123 function was previously demonstrated to be required for translation of all mitochondrial gene products. We have now generated an antibody against the PET123 protein and have used it to demonstrate that PET123 is a mitochondrial ribosomal protein of the small subunit. PET123 appears to be present at levels comparable to those of other mitochondrial ribosomal proteins, and its accumulation is dependent on the presence of the 15S rRNA gene in mitochondria. Taken together with the previous genetic data, these results strongly support a model in which the mRNA-specific translational activator PET122 works by directly interacting with the small ribosomal subunit to promote translation initiation on the coxIII mRNA.  相似文献   

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L. S. Folley  T. D. Fox 《Genetics》1991,129(3):659-668
We have used a generally applicable strategy for gene replacement in yeast mitochondria to mutate the translation initiation codon of the COX3 gene from AUG to AUA. The mutation, cox3-1, substantially reduced, but did not eliminate, translation of cytochrome c oxidase subunit III (coxIII). Strains bearing the mutation exhibited a leaky (partial) nonrespiratory growth phenotype and a reduced incorporation of radiolabeled amino acids into coxIII in vivo in the presence of cycloheximide. Hybridization experiments demonstrated that the mutation had little or no effect on levels of the COX3 mRNA. Residual translation of the cox3-1 mutant mRNA was dependent upon the three nuclearly coded mRNA-specific activators PET494, PET54 and PET122, known from previous studies to work through a site (or sites) upstream of the initiation codon to promote translation of the wild-type mRNA. Furthermore, respiratory growth of cox3-1 mutant strains was sensitive to decreased dosage of genes PET494 and PET122 in heterozygous mutant diploids, unlike the growth of strains carrying wild-type mtDNA. Some residual translation of the cox3-1 mRNA appeared to initiate at the mutant AUA codon, despite the fact that the 610-base 5'-mRNA leader contains numerous AUA triplets. We conclude that, while AUG is an important component of the COX3 translation initiation site, the site probably is also specified by other sequence or structural features.  相似文献   

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Translation of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondrial COX3 mRNA, encoding subunit III of cytochrome c oxidase, specifically requires the action of the nuclear gene products PET54, PET122, and PET494 at a site encoded in the 612-base 5' untranslated leader. To identify more precisely the site of action of the translational activators, we constructed two large deletions of the COX3 mRNA 5' untranslated leader. Both deletions blocked translation without affecting mRNA stability. However, one of the large deletions was able to revert to partial function by a small secondary deletion within the remaining 5' leader sequences. Translation of the resulting mutant (cox3-15) mRNA was still dependent on the nuclear-encoded specific activators but was cold sensitive. We selected revertants of this mitochondrial mutant at low temperature to identify genes encoding proteins that might interact with the COX3 mRNA 5' leader. One such revertant carried a missense mutation in the PET122 gene that was a strong and dominant suppressor of the cold-sensitive defect in the mRNA, indicating that the PET122 protein interacts functionally (possibly directly) with the COX3 mRNA 5' leader. The cox3-15 mutation was not suppressed by overproduction of the wild-type PET122 protein but was very weakly suppressed by overproduction of PET494 and slightly better suppressed by co-overproduction of PET494 and PET122.  相似文献   

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We have previously identified a protein with Mr approximately 40,000 (p40) that binds with high specificity and affinity to the 5'-untranslated leaders of mitochondrial mRNAs in yeast. Here we show that this protein is abundant, comprising about 0.4% of total mitochondrial protein. p40 is present in a cytoplasmic (rho degree) petite mutant that lacks mitochondrial protein synthesis and is therefore nuclear encoded. p40 can be detected by immunological techniques in cell lysates of several different pet mutants, specifically disturbed in the translation of individual mitochondrial mRNAs. It is thus not one of the translation factors defined by any of these mutations. In the case of a pet111 mutant, which is specifically blocked in the translation of COX2 mRNA, extracts still display COX2 mRNA binding activity, indicating that p40 complex formation in vitro is not dependent on the presence of PET111.  相似文献   

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The nuclear PET122 gene from S. cerevisiae is necessary for translation of a single mitochondrial mRNA that encodes subunit III of cytochrome c oxidase. We report here the cloning and nucleotide sequence of PET122, and properties of the predicted protein product, which consists of 242 residues. Analysis of PET122-lacZ translational fusions confirms that the PET122 coding region is translated in vivo and indicates that the PET122 protein product is targeted to mitochondria. A 117 residue domain located in the carboxy-terminal half of the PET122 protein, at least part of which is shown by characterization of mutants to be critical for PET122 function, exhibits 24% identity and 59% similarity to a portion of the catalytic domain of E. coli alanyl-tRNA synthetase. However, pet122 mutants are not defective in mitochondrial translation per se, as would be expected if PET122 encoded a tRNA synthetase. Instead, the PET122 protein may carry out one or more activities in common with tRNA synthetases, such as binding of ATP or RNA.  相似文献   

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Summary The activity of the nuclear gene PET494 is required to allow expression of the yeast mitochondrial gene oxi2. To aid the study of the mechanism of action of PET494 we have isolated this gene from yeast DNA. A clone bank of yeast DNA fragments in a yeast-E. coli shuttle vector was screened by transformation for a plasmid able to complement the pet494-1 amber mutation. A complementing plasmid was obtained that contained a unique 4.4 kb yeast sequence. This 4.4 kb sequence contains the PET494 gene. Integration of a plasmid containing it into chromosomal DNA by homologous recombination, and subsequent genetic analysis, demonstrated that the 4.4 kb fragment was tightly linked to the pet494-1 mutation. In addition, the corresponding 4.4 kb sequence isolated from a pet494-1 mutant failed to complement the mutation. A 2 kb fragment, subcloned from the original plasmid retained the ability to complement the mutation. The pet494-1 mutation maps to chromosome XIV between rna2 and lys9, approximately 2.4 cm from lys9.  相似文献   

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Summary The PET122 protein is one of three Saccharomyces cerevisiae nuclear gene products required specifically to activate translation of the mitochondrially coded COX3 mRNA. We have previously observed that mutations which remove the carboxy-terminal region of PET122 block translation of the COX3 mRNA but can be suppressed by unlinked nuclear mutations in several genes, two of which have been shown to code for proteins of the small subunit of mitochondrial ribosomes. Here we describe and map two more new genes identified as allele-specific suppressors that compensate for carboxy-terminal truncation of PET122. One of these genes, MRP17, is essential for the expression of all mitochondrial genes and encodes a protein of Mr 17343. The MRP17 protein is a component of the small ribosomal subunit in mitochondria, as demonstrated by the fact that a missense mutation, mrp17-1, predicted to cause a charge change indeed alters the charge of a mitochondrial ribosomal protein of the expected size. In addition, mrp17-1, in combination with some mutations affecting another mitochondrial ribosomal protein, caused a synthetic defective phenotype. These findings are consistent with a model in which PET122 functionally interacts with the ribosomal small subunit. The second new suppressor gene described here, PET127, encodes a protein too large (Mr 95900) to be a ribosomal protein and appears to operate by a different mechanism. PET127 is not absolutely required for mitochondrial gene expression and allele-specific suppression of pet122 mutations results from the loss of PET127 function: a pet127 deletion exhibited the same recessive suppressor activity as the original suppressor mutation. These findings suggest the possibility that PET127 could be a novel component of the mitochondrial translation system with a role in promoting accuracy of translational initiation.  相似文献   

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