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1.
The T cell antigen receptor (TCR) is an oligomeric protein complex made from at least six different integral membrane proteins (alpha beta gamma delta epsilon and zeta). The TCR is assembled in the ER of T cells, and correct assembly is required for transport to the cell surface. Single subunits and partial receptor complexes are retained in the ER where TCR alpha, beta, and CD3 delta chains are degraded selectively. The information required for the ER degradation of the TCR beta chain is confined to the membrane anchor of the protein (Wileman et al., 1990c; Bonifacino et al., 1990b). In this study we show that the rapid degradation of the TCR beta chain is inhibited when it assembles with single CD3 gamma, delta, or epsilon subunits in the ER, and have started to define the role played by transmembrane anchors, and receptor ectodomains, in the masking proteolytic targeting information. Acidic residues within the membrane spanning domains of CD3 subunits were essential for binding to the TCR beta chain. TCR beta chains and CD3 subunits therefore interact via transmembrane domains. However, when sites of binding were restricted to the membrane anchor of the TCR beta chain, stabilization by CD3 subunits was markedly reduced. Interactions between membrane spanning domains were not, therefore, sufficient for the protection of the beta chain from ER proteolysis. The presence of the C beta domain, containing the first 150 amino acids of the TCR ectodomain, greatly increased the stability of complexes formed in the ER. For assembly with CD3 epsilon, stability was further enhanced by the V beta amino acids. The results showed that the efficient neutralization of transmembrane proteolytic targeting information required associations between membrane spanning domains and the presence of receptor ectodomains. Interactions between receptor ectodomains may slow the dissociation of CD3 subunits from the beta chain and prolong the masking of transmembrane targeting information. In addition, the close proximity of TCR and CD3 ectodomains within the ER may provide steric protection from the action of proteases within the ER lumen.  相似文献   

2.
The T cell receptor for antigen (TCR) is composed of six different transmembrane proteins. T cells carefully control the intracellular transport of the receptor and allow only complete receptors to reach the plasma membrane. In an attempt to understand how T cells regulate this process, we used c-DNA transfection and subunit-specific antibodies to follow the intracellular transport of five subunits (alpha beta gamma delta epsilon) of the receptor. In particular, we assessed the intracellular stability of each chain. Our results showed that the chains were markedly different in their susceptibility to intracellular degradation. TCR alpha and beta and CD3 delta were degraded rapidly, whereas CD3 gamma and epsilon were stable. An analysis of the N-linked oligosaccharides of the glycoprotein subunits suggested that the chains were unable to reach the medial Golgi during the metabolic chase. This was supported by immunofluorescence micrographs that showed both the stable CD3 gamma and unstable CD3 delta chain localized in the endoplasmic reticulum. To study the effects of subunit associations on intracellular transport we used cotransfection to reconstitute precise combinations of subunits. Associations between stable and unstable subunits expressed in the same cell led to the formation of stable complexes. These complexes were retained in or close to the endoplasmic reticulum. The results suggested that the intracellular transport of the T cell receptor could be regulated by two mechanisms. The TCR alpha and beta and CD3 delta subunits were degraded rapidly and as a consequence failed to reach the plasma membrane. CD3 gamma or epsilon were stable but were retained inside the cell. The results also demonstrated that there was an interplay between the two pathways such that the CD3 gamma and epsilon subunits were able to protect labile chains from rapid intracellular degradation. In this way, they could seed subunit assembly in or close to the endoplasmic reticulum and allow a stable receptor to form before its transport to the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

3.
In this study the effects of A23187 and thapsigargin on the degradation of T-cell antigen receptor-beta (TCR-beta) and CD3-delta in the endoplasmic reticulum have been studied. Preliminary experiments showed that these drugs had different effects on the secretory pathway. Depletion of cellular calcium pools by incubation of cells with A23187 in calcium-free medium blocked transport between the endoplasmic reticulum and the Golgi apparatus whereas thapsigargin caused a modest increase in transport. When added to cells transfected with TCR-beta or CD3-delta the drugs caused an immediate stimulation of proteolysis of presynthesized protein and at maximum effective concentrations caused a 3-fold increase in the rate of degradation. They did not affect the lag period of 1 h which precedes degradation of newly synthesized proteins. Chelation of cytosolic calcium also accelerated degradation, suggesting that depletion of calcium from the endoplasmic reticulum was the main stimulus of proteolysis and that increased degradation was not caused by a transient increase in cytosolic calcium levels. The selectivity of degradation in the endoplasmic reticulum was maintained. A23187 had no effect on the stability of CD3-gamma nor co-transfected epsilon-beta dimers. Calcium depletion increased the overall rate of degradation in the endoplasmic reticulum and increased the rate of proteolysis of an "anchor minus" beta chain. The results suggested that proteolysis within the endoplasmic reticulum may be regulated by the high concentrations of Ca2+ which are stored in the organelle. Ca2+ may be required for protein folding. Calcium depletion may have caused the beta and delta chains to adopt a conformation that was more susceptible to proteolysis. Alternatively, calcium depletion may have disrupted the lumenal content of the endoplasmic reticulum and increased the access of proteases to potential substrates.  相似文献   

4.
The T cell receptor (TCR) beta-chain is produced in the endoplasmic reticulum where it associates with the TCR alpha-chain and the members of the CD3 complex to form the complete receptor. When the other chains of the complex are not available, the beta-chain is rapidly degraded within the endoplasmic reticulum. When incomplete TCR.CD3 complexes are formed, they are transported through the Golgi apparatus and degraded in lysosomes. In this study, a truncated form of the TCR beta-chain has been made by removal of the transmembrane and cytoplasmic segments. Unlike the normal beta-chain, the truncated molecule is stable and is transported through the Golgi apparatus and secreted. This process occurs at a similar rate in both T and B cells, indicating that it is not affected by the presence or absence of CD3 components. These data suggest that an element in the transmembrane or cytoplasmic region of the beta-chain confers sensitivity to the degradative control mechanisms that regulate TCR expression.  相似文献   

5.
The intracellular fate of T cell antigen receptor (TCR) subunits (alpha beta gamma delta epsilon zeta 2) is determined by their assembly in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). To study the structural bases for this tight correlation between assembly and intracellular fate, we sought to define the nature of determinants for both ER degradation and subunit assembly within the TCR-alpha chain. We found that a 9 amino acid transmembrane sequence of the TCR-alpha chain, containing 2 critical charged residues, was sufficient to cause ER degradation when placed in the context of the Tac antigen, used here as a reporter protein. CD3-delta assembled with chimeric proteins containing this short transmembrane sequence, and this assembly resulted in abrogation of targeting for ER degradation. Thus, the colocalization of determinants for ER degradation and sites of subunit interactions explains how the fate of some newly synthesized TCR chains can be decided on the basis of their assembly status.  相似文献   

6.
The endoplasmic reticulum, or an organelle closely associated with it, contains proteases that can be used to remove partially assembled or improperly folded proteins. Very little is known at present about the types of protease that degrade these proteins. The beta chain and cluster of differentiation (CD)3 delta subunit of the human T-cell antigen receptor (TCR) are degraded shortly after synthesis. In this study Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells transfected with either beta or delta were incubated with a panel of protease inhibitors, and the rates of degradation of the transfected proteins were followed using chain-specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs). Of the protease inhibitors tested, degradation of both chains was highly sensitive to sulfhydryl reagents and peptidyl inhibitors of cysteine proteases. Concentrations of inhibitors that produced near complete inhibition of degradation in the endoplasmic reticulum did not cause gross changes in cellular ATP levels nor did they significantly slow constitutive secretion from CHO cells. The inhibitors did not affect the ability of CHO cells to synthesize and assemble disulphide-linked TCR zeta dimers. We conclude that the protease inhibitors were not toxic to cells and did not affect the biosynthetic activity of the endoplasmic reticulum. Furthermore, they did not alter the ability of the endoplasmic reticulum to deliver its content to the Golgi apparatus. Taken together, these results suggest that the cysteine protease inhibitors slow degradation in the endoplasmic reticulum through an action on cysteine proteases. The results imply that the endoplasmic reticulum contains cysteine proteases that can be used to remove retained proteins.  相似文献   

7.
We have characterized a pre-Golgi, proteolytic pathway for rapid degradation of newly synthesized T cell receptor (TCR) subunits which is insensitive to drugs that block lysosomal proteolysis. The site of degradation in this pathway is either part of or closely related to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). This "ER" degradative pathway very likely plays an important role in many cells in the removal of unassembled or incompletely assembled membrane protein complexes from the secretory pathway. It is the sole pathway followed by TCR alpha chains and alpha-beta complexes in transfected fibroblasts. In T cells treated with ionophores, which disrupt transport of the TCR from the ER to the Golgi, all newly synthesized alpha, beta, and delta chains are destroyed by this pathway. A variety of biochemical and morphological techniques have been used to distinguish the "ER" degradative pathway from an alternative, lysosomal pathway.  相似文献   

8.
The TCR/CD3 complex is a multimeric protein complex composed of a minimum of seven transmembrane chains (TCR alpha beta-CD3 gamma delta epsilon zeta 2). Whereas earlier studies have demonstrated that both the TCR-alpha and -beta chains are required for the cell surface expression of the TCR/CD3 complex, the role of the CD3 chains for the TCR/CD3 expression have not been experimentally addressed in human T cells. In this study the function of the CD3-zeta chain for the assembly, intracellular processing, and expression of the TCR/CD3 complex in the human leukemic T cell line Jurkat was investigated. The results indicate that: 1) CD3-zeta is required for the cell surface expression of the TCR/CD3 complex; 2) the pentameric form (TCR alpha beta-CD3 gamma delta epsilon) of the TCR/CD3 complex and single TCR chains associated with CD3 (TCR alpha-CD3 gamma delta epsilon and TCR beta-CD3 gamma delta epsilon) are produced in the endoplasmic reticulum in the absence of CD3-zeta; 3) the CD3-zeta does not associate with TCR alpha-CD3 gamma delta epsilon or TCR beta-CD3 gamma delta epsilon complexes; 4) CD3-zeta associate with the pentameric form of the TCR/CD3 complex in the endoplasmic reticulum to form the heptameric complex (TCR alpha beta-CD3 gamma delta epsilon----TCR alpha beta-CD3 gamma delta epsilon 2); and 5) CD3-zeta is required for the export of the TCR/CD3 complex from the endoplasmic reticulum to the Golgi apparatus for subsequent processing.  相似文献   

9.
The alpha beta T cell antigen receptor (TCR) that is expressed on most T lymphocytes is a multisubunit transmembrane complex composed of at least six different proteins (alpha, beta, gamma, delta, epsilon and zeta) that are assembled in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and then transported to the plasma membrane. Expression of the TCR complex is quantitatively regulated during T cell development, with immature CD4+CD8+ thymocytes expressing only 10% of the number of surface alpha beta TCR complexes that are expressed on mature T cells. However, the molecular basis for low TCR expression in developing alpha beta T cells is unknown. In the present study we report the unexpected finding that assembly of nascent component chains into complete TCR alpha beta complexes is severely impaired in immature CD4+CD8+ thymocytes relative to their mature T cell progeny. In particular, the initial association of TCR alpha with TCR beta proteins, which occurs relatively efficiently in mature T cells, is markedly inefficient in immature CD4+CD8+ thymocytes, even for a matched pair of transgenic TCR alpha and TCR beta proteins. Inefficient formation of TCR alpha beta heterodimers in immature CD4+CD8+ thymocytes was found to result from the unique instability of nascent TCR alpha proteins within the ER of immature CD4+CD8+ thymocytes, with nascent TCR alpha proteins having a median survival time of only 15 min in CD4+CD8+ thymocytes, but > 75 min in mature T cells. Thus, these data demonstrate that stability of TCR alpha proteins within the ER is developmentally regulated and provide a molecular basis for quantitative differences in alpha beta TCR expression on immature and mature T cells. In addition, these results provide the first example of a receptor complex whose expression is quantitatively regulated during development by post-translational limitations on receptor assembly.  相似文献   

10.
Kinectin has been proposed to be a membrane anchor for kinesin on intracellular organelles. A kinectin isoform that lacks a major portion of the kinesin-binding domain does not bind kinesin but interacts with another resident of the endoplasmic reticulum, the translation elongation factor-1 delta (EF-1 delta). This was shown by yeast two-hybrid analysis and a number of in vitro and in vivo assays. EF-1 delta provides the guanine nucleotide exchange activities on EF-1 alpha during elongation step of protein synthesis. The minimal EF-1 delta-binding domain on kinectin resides within a conserved region present in all the kinectin isoforms. Overexpression of the kinectin fragments in vivo disrupted the intracellular localization of EF-1 delta proteins. This report provides evidence of an alternative kinectin function as the membrane anchor for EF-1 delta on the endoplasmic reticulum and provides clues to the EF-1 complex assembly and anchorage on the endoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

11.
The signal sequence within polypeptide chains that designates whether a protein is to be anchored to the membrane by a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) anchor is characterized by a carboxyl-terminal hydrophobic domain preceded by a short hydrophilic spacer linked to the GPI anchor attachment (omega) site. The hydrophobic domain within the GPI anchor signal sequence is very similar to a transmembrane domain within a stop transfer sequence. To investigate whether the GPI anchor signal sequence is translocated across or integrated into the endoplasmic reticulum membrane we studied the translocation, GPI anchor addition, and glycosylation of different variants of a model GPI-anchored protein. Our results unequivocally demonstrated that the hydrophobic domain within a GPI signal cannot act as a transmembrane domain and is fully translocated even when followed by an authentic charged cytosolic tail sequence. However, a single amino acid change within the hydrophobic domain of the GPI-signal converts it into a transmembrane domain that is fully integrated into the endoplasmic reticulum membrane. These results demonstrated that the translocation machinery can recognize and differentiate subtle changes in hydrophobic sequence allowing either full translocation or membrane integration.  相似文献   

12.
Most T lymphocytes express on their surfaces a multisubunit receptor complex, the T cell antigen receptor (TCR) containing alpha, beta, gamma, delta, epsilon, and zeta molecules, that has been widely studied as a model system for protein quality control. Although the parameters of TCR assembly are relatively well established, little information exists regarding the stage(s) of TCR oligomerization where folding of TCR proteins is completed. Here we evaluated the modification of TCR glycoproteins by the endoplasmic reticulum folding sensor enzyme UDP-glucose:glycoprotein glucosyltransferase (GT) as a unique and sensitive indicator of how TCR subunits assembled into multisubunit complexes are perceived by the endoplasmic reticulum quality control system. These results demonstrate that all TCR subunits containing N-glycans were modified by GT and that TCR proteins were differentially reglucosylated during their assembly with partner TCR chains. Importantly, these data show that GT modification of most TCR subunits persisted until assembly of CD3alpha beta chains and formation of CD3-associated, disulfide-linked alpha beta heterodimers. These studies provide a novel evaluation of the folding status of TCR glycoproteins during their assembly into multisubunit complexes and are consistent with the concept that TCR folding is finalized convergent with formation of alpha beta delta epsilon gamma epsilon complexes.  相似文献   

13.
K P Kearse  D B Williams    A Singer 《The EMBO journal》1994,13(16):3678-3686
The alpha beta T-cell antigen receptor (TCR) is a multisubunit transmembrane complex composed of at least six different proteins (alpha, beta, gamma, delta, epsilon and zeta) that are assembled in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). In this report we have examined the role of oligosaccharide processing on survival and assembly of nascent TCR proteins within the ER and their associations with molecular chaperone proteins important in TCR assembly. We found that treatment of BW5147 T cells with the glucosidase inhibitor castanospermine resulted in markedly accelerated degradation of nascent TCR alpha proteins with a half-life of approximately 20 min. Accelerated degradation was unique to TCR alpha proteins, as the stability of nascent TCR beta and CD3 gamma,epsilon chains was unaltered. Consistent with a requirement for glucose (Glc) trimming for survival of nascent TCR alpha proteins within the ER, we found that newly synthesized TCR alpha chains were innately unstable in the glucosidase II-deficient BW5147 mutant cell line PHAR2.7. In addition to destabilizing nascent TCR alpha proteins we found that persistence of Glc residues on core oligosaccharides markedly interfered with association of both TCR alpha and TCR beta glycoproteins with the molecular chaperone calnexin. Finally, using 2B4 T hybridoma cells in which TCR complexes are efficiently assembled, we found that rapid degradation of nascent TCR alpha proteins induced by impaired Glc trimming severely limits assembly of TCR alpha proteins with TCR beta proteins.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
The selective breakdown of newly synthesized proteins retained within the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is probably mediated by the specific recognition of structural features of protein substrates by components of a degradative system. Within the alpha chain of the multisubunit T-cell antigen receptor (TCR) complex, a transmembrane sequence containing two basic amino acid residues has been shown to act as a determinant for retention and rapid degradation in the ER. We now demonstrate that single basic or acidic amino acid residues can cause targeting for retention and degradation in the ER when placed within the transmembrane domain of an integral membrane protein normally destined for the cell surface. The effect of such potentially charged residues is dependent on their relative position within the transmembrane sequence and on the nature of the amino acid side chains. The phenotypic changes induced by potentially charged transmembrane residues occur without apparent alterations of the global folding or transmembrane topology of the mutant proteins. These observations test the hypothesis that potentially charged residues within transmembrane domains can provide the basis for a motif for ER degradation and explain the selective breakdown of some proteins retained within the ER.  相似文献   

15.
Many plasma membrane proteins are anchored to the membrane via a C-terminal glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI) moiety. The GPI anchor is attached to the protein in the endoplasmic reticulum by transamidation, a reaction in which a C-terminal GPI-attachment signal is cleaved off concomitantly with addition of the GPI moiety. GPI-attachment signals are poorly conserved on the sequence level but are all composed of a polar segment that includes the GPI-attachment site followed by a hydrophobic segment located at the very C terminus of the protein. Here, we show that efficient GPI modification requires that the hydrophobicity of the C-terminal segment is "marginal": less hydrophobic than type II transmembrane anchors and more hydrophobic than the most hydrophobic segments found in secreted proteins. We further show that the GPI-attachment signal can be modified by the transamidase irrespective of whether it is first released into the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum or is retained in the endoplasmic reticulum membrane.  相似文献   

16.
The signal recognition particle receptor (SR) is required for the cotranslational targeting of both secretory and membrane proteins to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane. During targeting, the SR interacts with the signal recognition particle (SRP) which is bound to the signal sequence of the nascent protein chain. This interaction catalyzes the GTP-dependent transfer of the nascent chain from SRP to the protein translocation apparatus in the ER membrane. The SR is a heterodimeric protein comprised of a 69-kD subunit (SR alpha) and a 30- kD subunit (SR beta) which are associated with the ER membrane in an unknown manner. SR alpha and the 54-kD subunits of SRP (SRP54) each contain related GTPase domains which are required for SR and SRP function. Molecular cloning and sequencing of a cDNA encoding SR beta revealed that SR beta is a transmembrane protein and, like SR alpha and SRP54, is a member of the GTPase superfamily. Although SR beta defines its own GTPase subfamily, it is distantly related to ARF and Sar1. Using UV cross-linking, we confirm that SR beta binds GTP specifically. Proteolytic digestion experiments show that SR alpha is required for the interaction of SRP with SR. SR alpha appears to be peripherally associated with the ER membrane, and we suggest that SR beta, as an integral membrane protein, mediates the membrane association of SR alpha. The discovery of its guanine nucleotide-binding domain, however, makes it likely that its role is more complex than that of a passive anchor for SR alpha. These findings suggest that a cascade of three directly interacting GTPases functions during protein targeting to the ER membrane.  相似文献   

17.
The T cell antigen receptor (TCR) is a multisubunit complex composed of at least seven transmembrane chains. The predominant species in most T cells has the composition alpha beta gamma delta epsilon zeta 2. The roles of subunit assembly in transport out of the ER and in the recently described process of pre-Golgi degradation of newly synthesized TCR chains were analyzed in a T-cell line deficient in the synthesis of delta chains (delta 2) and in COS-1 fibroblasts transfected with genes encoding individual TCR chains. Studies with the delta-deficient T-cell line showed that, in the absence of delta, the other TCR chains were synthesized at normal rates, but, instead of being transported to the cell surface, they were retained in the ER. Analysis of the fate of TCR chains retained in the ER showed that they were degraded at vastly different rates by a nonlysosomal pathway. Whereas the alpha chains were degraded rapidly, gamma, zeta, and epsilon were relatively long-lived. To analyze whether this selective degradation was because of different intrinsic susceptibility of the individual chains to degradation or to the formation of resistant oligomers, TCR chains were expressed alone or in combinations in COS-1 fibroblasts. These studies showed that (a) individual TCR chains were degraded at different rates when expressed alone in COS-1 cells, and (b) sensitive chains could be stabilized by coexpression with a resistant chain. Taken together, these observations indicate that both intrinsic sensitivity and subunit assembly play a role in determining the rates at which newly synthesized TCR chains are degraded in the ER.  相似文献   

18.
Kinectin is an integral membrane protein with many isoforms primarily found on the endoplasmic reticulum. It has been found to bind kinesin, Rho GTPase, and translation elongation factor-1delta. None of the existing models for the quaternary organization of the elongation factor-1 complex in higher eukaryotes involves kinectin. We have investigated here the assembly of the elongation factor-1 complex onto endoplasmic reticulum via kinectin using in vitro and in vivo assays. We established that the entire elongation factor-1 complex can be anchored to endoplasmic reticulum via kinectin, and the interacting partners are as follows. Kinectin binds EF-1delta, which in turn binds EF-1gamma but not EF-1beta; EF-1gamma binds EF-1delta and EF-1beta but not kinectin. In vivo splice blocking of the kinectin exons 36 and 37 produced kinectin lacking the EF-1delta binding domain, which disrupted the membrane localization of EF-1delta, EF-1gamma, and EF-1beta on endoplasmic reticulum, similar to the disruptions seen with the overexpression of kinectin fragments containing the EF-1delta binding domain. The disruptions of the EF-1delta/kinectin interaction inhibited expression of membrane proteins but enhanced synthesis of cytosolic proteins in vivo. These findings suggest that anchoring the elongation factor-1 complex onto endoplasmic reticulum via EF-1delta/kinectin interaction is important for regulating protein synthesis in eukaryotic cells.  相似文献   

19.
Intracellular fate of fibrinogen B beta chain expressed in COS cells   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Full-length fibrinogen B beta cDNA was subcloned into an expression vector, pBC12BI, and transfected into COS cells. B beta chain expression was measured by pulse-labelling cells with L-[35S]methionine, immunoprecipitating the B beta chain with antibody to fibrinogen and separating the nascent radioactive protein by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). B beta chain was expressed in transfected COS cells but was not secreted into the medium. Treatment with endoglycosidase H showed that non-secreted B beta chain contains mannose-rich carbohydrates rather than the complex form of carbohydrate which occurs in plasma fibrinogen and indicates that B beta chain is not transported to the Golgi apparatus. In transfected COS cells, antibody to fibrinogen co-immunoprecipitated B beta chain and 78 kDa immunoglobulin-binding protein (BiP) and antibody to BiP immunoprecipitated BiP and nascent B beta chains. Non-secreted B beta chain was degraded intracellularly with a half-life of 5 h by enzymes which were not affected by incubating transfected cells with NH4Cl, which indicates a non-lysosomal pathway of degradation. These studies indicate that B beta chain by itself does not contain the signal for fibrinogen secretion and that non-secreted B beta chain is associated with BiP and degraded in the rough endoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

20.
S D Black 《FASEB journal》1992,6(2):680-685
The membrane topology of the mammalian P450 cytochromes has been studied intensively by computational approaches, proteolysis, chemical modification, genetic engineering, and immunochemistry. Initial results for the cytochromes of the endoplasmic reticulum appeared to indicate a polytopic, four to eight transmembrane anchor model with an active site buried in the membrane. However, recent findings show that the microsomal P450s are bound to the endoplasmic reticulum by only one or two transmembrane peptides located at the NH2-terminal end, and that the active site is part of a large cytoplasmic domain that may have one or two additional peripheral membrane contacts. The membrane-bound state is viewed as rather rigid, and the plane of the heme lies between perpendicular and parallel to the plane of the endoplasmic reticulum. The mitochondrial P450 cytochromes lack a hydrophobic NH2 terminus in the mature form, and thus differ from the microsomal isozymes in this significant way. However, although the exact topology of cytochrome P450 in the inner mitochondrial membrane remains to be elucidated, certain features are clearly comparable to those of microsomal P450. Therefore, the membrane topology of the P450 gene superfamily may follow a similar pattern.  相似文献   

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