首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
2.
MRP20 and MRP49 are proteins of the large subunit of the mitochondrial ribosome in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Their genes were identified through immunological screening of a genomic library in the expression vector lambda gt11. Nucleotide sequencing revealed that MRP49 is tightly linked to TPK3 and encodes a 16-kDa, basic protein with no significant relatedness to any other known protein. MRP20 specifies a 263-amino-acid polypeptide with sequence similarity to members of the L23 family of ribosomal proteins. The levels of the mRNAs and proteins for both MRP20 and MRP49 were regulated in response to carbon source. In [rho0] strains lacking mitochondrial rRNA, the levels of the two proteins were reduced severalfold, presumably because the unassembled proteins are unstable. Null mutants of MRP20 converted to [rho-] or [rho0], a characteristic phenotype of mutations in essential genes for mitochondrial translation. Inactivation of MRP49 caused a cold-sensitive respiration-deficient phenotype, indicating that MRP49 is not an essential ribosomal protein. The mrp49 mutants were defective in the assembly of stable 54 S ribosomal subunits at the nonpermissive temperature. With the results presented here, there are now published sequences for 14 yeast mitochondrial ribosomal proteins, only five of which bear discernable relationships to eubacterial ribosomal proteins.  相似文献   

3.
Discoordinate expression of the yeast mitochondrial ribosomal protein MRP1   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
We have examined expression of the protein coded within the MRP 1 locus of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Direct evidence is provided for the assignment of the MRP1 gene product as a protein component of the small subunit of mitochondrial ribosomes. Further studies examined the extent to which the expression of the MRP1 protein is coordinated with the expression of other mitochondrial ribosomal components coded in the nuclear and mitochondrial genomes. Extra copies of the MRP1 gene were introduced into yeast cells to perturb expression from MRP1 relative to other mitochondrial ribosomal components to determine whether forms of regulation function to limit the accumulation of either MRP1 mRNA or protein under these conditions. Increases in MRP1 gene dosage were accompanied by substantial increases in both MRP1 mRNA and protein, indicating that their accumulation was not linked to the level of expression of other mitochondrial ribosomal components. This conclusion was confirmed by additional studies that showed that the accumulation of the MRP1 protein was unaffected in cells that did not express mitochondrially-encoded rRNAs. These results contrast with previous studies on the expression of two other mitochondrial ribosomal proteins indicating that regulatory properties of mitochondrial ribosomal proteins are quite diverse.  相似文献   

4.
We have isolated clones representing at least three nuclear genes for mitochondrial ribosomal proteins from Neurospora crassa by screening a lambda gt11 cDNA library with an antiserum against a mixture of these proteins. The cDNA and genomic DNA sequence for one of these genes, mrp-3, was determined. The MRP3 protein was purified by immune-affinity chromatography, using a monoclonal antibody probe, and subjected to amino acid sequence analysis to identify the mature amino terminus and a prospective mitochondrial-targeting presequence. MRP3 was identified as the largest, least basic protein detected from the small subunit of ribosomes which had been salt-washed and fractionated on sucrose gradients. However, the mRNA and protein products of mrp-3 were found to be present in excess over those of other N. crassa mitoribosomal protein genes. Using a solution hybridization/S1 nuclease assay, we found three-fold- more mRNA for mrp-3 than for another mito-ribosomal protein gene. In addition, a 30- to 50-fold excess of non-ribosomal MRP3 protein was discovered. The additional protein was localized in mitochondrial membrane fractions; none was detected in matrix fractions after removal of the ribosomes. An immunologically related protein was detected in ribosome and membrane fractions of mitochondria from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The functional significance of this dual localization remains an enigma.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Bovine mitochondrial small subunit ribosomal proteins were separated by two-dimensional electrophoresis. The region containing the most basic protein(s) was excised and the protein(s) present subjected to in-gel digestion with trypsin. Electrospray tandem mass spectrometry was used to provide sequence information on some of the peptide products. Searches of the human EST database using the sequence of the longest peptide analyzed indicated that this peptide was from the mammalian mitochondrial homolog of prokaryotic ribosomal protein S7 (MRP S7(human)). MRP S7(human) is a 28-kDa protein with a pI of 10. Significant homology to bacterial S7 is observed especially in the C-terminal half of the protein. Surprisingly, MRP S7(human) shows less homology to the corresponding mitochondrial proteins from plants and fungi than to bacterial S7.  相似文献   

7.
O'Brien TW 《IUBMB life》2003,55(9):505-513
Mammalian mitochondrial ribosomes (55S) differ unexpectedly from bacterial (70S) and cytoplasmic ribosomes (80S), as well as other kinds of mitochondrial ribosomes. Typical of mammalian mitochondrial ribosomes, the bovine mitochondrial ribosome has been developed as a model system for the study of human mitochondrial ribosomes, to address several questions related to the structure, function, biosynthesis and evolution of these interesting ribosomes. Bovine mitochondrial ribosomal proteins (MRPs) from each subunit have been identified and characterized with respect to individuality and electrophoretic properties, amino acid sequence, topographic disposition, RNA binding properties, evolutionary relationships and reaction with affinity probes of ribosomal functional domains. Several distinctive properties of these ribosomes are being elucidated, including their antibiotic susceptibility and composition. Human mitochondrial ribosomes lack several of the major RNA stem structures of bacterial ribosomes but they contain a correspondingly higher protein content (as many as 80 proteins), suggesting a model where proteins have replaced RNA structural elements during the evolution of these ribosomes. Despite their lower RNA content they are physically larger than bacterial ribosomes, because of the 'extra' proteins they contain. The extra proteins in mitochondrial ribosomes are 'new' in the sense that they are not homologous to proteins in bacterial or cytoplasmic ribosomes. Some of the new proteins appear to be bifunctional. All of the mammalian MRPs are encoded in nuclear genes (a separate set from those encoding cytoplasmic ribosomal proteins) which are evolving more rapidly than those encoding cytoplasmic ribosomal proteins. The MRPs are imported into mitochondria where they assemble coordinately with mitochondrially transcribed rRNAs into ribosomes that are responsible for translating the 13 mRNAs for essential proteins of the oxidative phosphorylation system.  相似文献   

8.
The nucleotide sequence of mitochondrial ribosomal protein rps13 gene from wild perennial grass Elymus sibiricus is presented. It was determined by the method of PCR amplification with specific oligonucleotide primers and the direct sequencing of the amplification product. The sequence of E. sibiricus mitochondrial gene for S13 predicts a hydrophobic ribosomal protein of 116 amino acids that shows strong similarity to those of wheat (99.7% identity) and maize (98%). The deduced amino acid sequence of S13 protein from E. sibiricus and homologous plant's (Zea mays, Daucus carota, Nicotiana tabacum, Marchantia polymorpha) and nonplant's (Escherichia coli) proteins shows the presence of hydrophobic amino acids' motif -L-X10-L-X10-M-X10-L-X10-L-. Slightly modified it can be found in many other ribosomal proteins. This conserved motif is presumed to be particularly important for association of the ribosomal S13 protein with other proteins in the small subunit of the mitochondrial ribosome.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Identification of all the protein components of the small subunit (28 S) of the mammalian mitochondrial ribosome has been achieved by carrying out proteolytic digestions of whole 28 S subunits followed by analysis of the resultant peptides by liquid chromatography and tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS). Peptide sequence information was used to search the human EST data bases and complete coding sequences of the proteins were assembled. The human mitochondrial ribosome has 29 distinct proteins in the small subunit. Fourteen of this group of proteins are homologs of the Escherichia coli 30 S ribosomal proteins S2, S5, S6, S7, S9, S10, S11, S12, S14, S15, S16, S17, S18, and S21. All of these proteins have homologs in Drosophila melanogaster, Caenorhabditis elegans, and Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondrial ribosomes. Surprisingly, three variants of ribosomal protein S18 are found in the mammalian and D. melanogaster mitochondrial ribosomes while C. elegans has two S18 homologs. The S18 homologs tend to be more closely related to chloroplast S18s than to prokaryotic S18s. No mitochondrial homologs to prokaryotic ribosomal proteins S1, S3, S4, S8, S13, S19, and S20 could be found in the peptides obtained from the whole 28 S subunit digests or by analysis of the available data bases. The remaining 15 proteins present in mammalian mitochondrial 28 S subunits (MRP-S22 through MRP-S36) are specific to mitochondrial ribosomes. Proteins in this group have no apparent homologs in bacterial, chloroplast, archaebacterial, or cytosolic ribosomes. All but two of these proteins have a clear homolog in D. melanogaster while all but three can be found in the genome of C. elegans. Five of the mitochondrial specific ribosomal proteins have homologs in S. cerevisiae.  相似文献   

11.
Translation of mitochondrial mRNAs in Saccharomyces cerevisiae depends on mRNA-specific translational activators that recognize the 5′ untranslated leaders (5′-UTLs) of their target mRNAs. We have identified mutations in two new nuclear genes that suppress translation defects due to certain alterations in the 5′-UTLs of both the COX2 and COX3 mRNAs, indicating a general function in translational activation. One gene, MRP21, encodes a protein with a domain related to the bacterial ribosomal protein S21 and to unidentified proteins of several animals. The other gene, MRP51, encodes a novel protein whose only known homolog is encoded by an unidentified gene in S. kluyveri. Deletion of either MRP21 or MRP51 completely blocked mitochondrial gene expression. Submitochondrial fractionation showed that both Mrp21p and Mrp51p cosediment with the mitochondrial ribosomal small subunit. The suppressor mutations are missense substitutions, and those affecting Mrp21p alter the region homologous to E. coli S21, which is known to interact with mRNAs. Interactions of the suppressor mutations with leaky mitochondrial initiation codon mutations strongly suggest that the suppressors do not generally increase translational efficiency, since some alleles that strongly suppress 5′-UTL mutations fail to suppress initiation codon mutations. We propose that mitochondrial ribosomes themselves recognize a common feature of mRNA 5′-UTLs which, in conjunction with mRNA-specific translational activation, is required for organellar translation initiation.  相似文献   

12.
Graack HR  Bryant ML  O'Brien TW 《Biochemistry》1999,38(50):16569-16577
Bovine mitochondrial ribosomes are presented as a model system for mammalian mitochondrial ribosomes. An alternative system for identifying individual bovine mitochondrial ribosomal proteins (MRPs) by RP-HPLC is described. To identify and to characterize individual MRPs proteins were purified from bovine liver, separated by RP-HPLC, and identified by 2D PAGE techniques and immunoblotting. Molecular masses of individual MRPs were determined. Selected proteins were subjected to N-terminal amino acid sequencing. The peptide sequences obtained were used to screen different databases to identify several corresponding MRP sequences from human, mouse, rat, and yeast. Signal sequences for mitochondrial import were postulated by comparison of the bovine mature N-termini determined by amino acid sequencing with the deduced mammalian MRP sequences. Significant sequence similarities of these new MRPs to known r-proteins from other sources, e.g., E. coli, were detected only for two of the four MRP families presented. This finding suggests that mammalian mitochondrial ribosomes contain several novel proteins. Amino acid sequence information for all of the bovine MRPs will prove invaluable for assigning functions to their genes, which would otherwise remain unknown.  相似文献   

13.
Zinc finger-like motifs in rat ribosomal proteins S27 and S29.   总被引:5,自引:1,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
The primary structures of the rat 40S ribosomal subunit proteins S27 and S29 were deduced from the sequences of nucleotides in recombinant cDNAs and confirmed by determination of amino acid sequences in the proteins. Ribosomal protein S27 has 83 amino acids and the molecular weight is 9,339. Hybridization of cDNA to digests of nuclear DNA suggests that there are 4-6 copies of the S27 gene; the mRNA for the protein is about 620 nucleotides in length. Ribosomal protein S29 has 55 amino acids and the molecular weight is 6,541. There are 14-17 copies of the S29 gene and its mRNA is about 500 nucleotides in length. Rat ribosomal protein S29 is related to several members of the archaebacterial and eubacterial S14 family of ribosomal proteins. S27 and S29 have zinc finger-like motifs as do other proteins from eukaryotic, archaebacterial, eubacterial, and mitochondrial ribosomes. Moreover, ribosomes and ribosomal subunits appear to contain zinc and iron as well.  相似文献   

14.

Background

Messenger RNAs encoded by mitochondrial genomes are translated on mitochondrial ribosomes that have unique structure and protein composition compared to prokaryotic and cytoplasmic ribosomes. Mitochondrial ribosomes are a patchwork of core proteins that share homology with prokaryotic ribosomal proteins and new, supernumerary proteins that can be unique to different organisms. In mammals, there are specific supernumerary ribosomal proteins that are not present in other eukaryotes.

Scope of review

Here we discuss the roles of supernumerary proteins in the regulation of mitochondrial gene expression and compare them among different eukaryotic systems. Furthermore, we consider if differences in the structure and organization of mitochondrial genomes may have contributed to the acquisition of mitochondrial ribosomal proteins with new functions.

Major conclusions

The distinct and diverse compositions of mitochondrial ribosomes illustrate the high evolutionary divergence found between mitochondrial genetic systems.

General significance

Elucidating the role of the organism-specific supernumerary proteins may provide a window into the regulation of mitochondrial gene expression through evolution in response to distinct evolutionary paths taken by mitochondria in different organisms. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Frontiers of Mitochondrial Research.  相似文献   

15.
We report the genetic characterization, molecular cloning, and sequencing of a novel nuclear suppressor, the NAM9 gene from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which acts on mutations of mitochondrial DNA. The strain NAM9-1 was isolated as a respiration-competent revertant of a mitochondrial mit mutant which carries the V25 ochre mutation in the oxi1 gene. Genetic characterization of the NAM9-1 mutation has shown that it is a nuclear dominant omnipotent suppressor alleviating several mutations in all four mitochondrial genes tested and has suggested its informational, and probably ribosomal, character. The NAM9 gene was cloned by transformation of the recipient oxi1-V25 mutant to respiration competence by using a gene bank from the NAM9-1 rho o strain. Orthogonal-field alternation gel electrophoresis analysis and genetic mapping localized the NAM9 gene on the right arm of chromosome XIV. Sequence analysis of the NAM9 gene showed that it encodes a basic protein of 485 amino acids with a presequence that could target the protein to the mitochondrial matrix. The N-terminal sequence of 200 amino acids of the deduced NAM9 product strongly resembles the S4 ribosomal proteins from chloroplasts and bacteria. Significant although less extensive similarity was found with ribosomal cytoplasmic proteins from lower eucaryotes, including S. cerevisiae. Chromosomal inactivation of the NAM9+ gene is not lethal to the cell but leads to respiration deficiency and loss of mitochondrial DNA integrity. We conclude that the NAM9 gene product is a mitochondrial ribosomal counterpart of S4 ribosomal proteins found in other systems and that the suppressor acts through decreasing the fidelity of translation.  相似文献   

16.
The intracellular site of synthesis of mitochondrial ribosomal proteins (MRP) in Neurospora crassa has been investigated using three complementary approaches. (a) Mitochondrial protein synthesis in vitro: Tritium-labeled proteins made by isolated mitochondria were compared to 14C-labeled marker MRP by cofractionation in a two-step procedure involving isoelectric focusing and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Examination of the electrophoretic profiles showed that essentially none of the peaks of in vitro product corresponded exactly to any of the MRP marker peaks. (b) Sensitivity of in vivo MRP synthesis to chloramphenicol: Cells were labeled with leucine-3H in the presence of chloramphenicol, mitochondrial ribosomal subunits were subsequently isolated, and their proteins fractionated by isoelectric focusing followed by gel electrophoresis. The labeling of every single MRP was found to be insensitive to chloramphenicol, a selective inhibitor of mitochondrial protein synthesis. (c) Sensitivity of in vivo MRP synthesis to anisomycin: We have found this antibiotic to be a good selective inhibitor of cytoplasmic protein synthesis in Neurospora. In the presence of anisomycin the labeling of virtually all MRP is inhibited to the same extent as the labeling of cytoplasmic ribosomal proteins. On the basis of these three types of studies we conclude that most if not all 53 structural proteins of mitochondrial ribosomal subunits in Neurospora are synthesized by cytoplasmic ribosomes.  相似文献   

17.
O'Brien TW 《Gene》2002,286(1):73-79
Mitochondrial ribosomes comprise the most diverse group of ribosomes known. The mammalian mitochondrial ribosomes (55S) differ unexpectedly from bacterial (70S) and cytoplasmic ribosomes (80S), as well as other kinds of mitochondrial ribosomes. The bovine mitochondrial ribosome has been developed as a model system for the study of human mitochondrial ribosomes to address several questions related to the structure, function, biosynthesis and evolution of these interesting ribosomes. Bovine mitochondrial ribosomal proteins (MRPs) from each subunit have been identified and characterized with respect to individuality and electrophoretic properties, amino acid sequence, topographic disposition, RNA binding properties, evolutionary relationships and reaction with affinity probes of ribosomal functional domains. Several distinctive properties of these ribosomes are being elucidated, including their antibiotic susceptibility and composition. Mammalian mitochondrial ribosomes lack several of the major RNA stem structures of bacterial ribosomes but they contain a correspondingly higher protein content (as many as 80 proteins), suggesting a model where proteins have replaced RNA structural elements during the evolution of these ribosomes. Despite their lower RNA content they are physically larger than bacterial ribosomes, because of the 'extra' proteins they contain. The extra proteins in mitochondrial ribosomes are 'new' in the sense that they are not homologous to proteins in bacterial or cytoplasmic ribosomes. Some of the new proteins appear to be bifunctional. All of the mammalian MRPs are encoded in nuclear genes (a separate set from those encoding cytoplasmic ribosomal proteins) which are evolving more rapidly than those encoding cytoplasmic ribosomal proteins. The MRPs are imported into mitochondria where they assemble coordinately with mitochondrially transcribed rRNAs into ribosomes that are responsible for translating the 13 mRNAs for essential proteins of the oxidative phosphorylation system. Interest is growing in the structure, organization, chromosomal location and expression of genes for human MRPs. Proteins which are essential for mitoribosome function are candidates for involvement in human genetic disease.  相似文献   

18.
The genes for ribosomal proteins S4, S13 or S15 were fused with the gene for staphylococcal protein A, or derivatives thereof (2A'-7A'). The gene fusions were introduced into Escherichia coli strains, mutated in the corresponding ribosomal protein gene, by transformation. These mutated ribosomal proteins cause a phenotype that can be complemented. Thus, the phenotype of the transformants was tested and the ribosomal proteins were analyzed. The S4 N-terminal fusion protein severely disturbed growth of both the mutant and the wild-type strains. The S13 C-terminal fusion protein was proteolyzed close to the fusion point, giving a ribosomal protein moiety that could assemble into the ribosome normally. S15 N-terminal fusion proteins complemented a cold-sensitive strain lacking protein S15 in its ribosomes. These fused proteins were assembled into active ribosomes. The position of S15 in the 30S ribosomal subunit is well known. Therefore, in structural studies of the ribosome in vivo, the S15 fusion proteins can be used as a physical reporter for S15.  相似文献   

19.
A composite protein sequence database was searched for amino acid sequences similar to the C-terminal domain of the dihydrolipoamide acetyltransferase subunit (E2p) of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex of Escherichia coli. Nine sequences with extensive similarity were found, of which eight were E2 subunits. The other was for a putative mitochondrial ribosomal protein, MRP3, from Neurospora crassa. Alignment of the MRP3 and E2 sequences showed that the similarity extends through the entire MRP3 sequence and that MRP3 is most closely related to the E2p subunit of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex from Saccharomyces cerevisiae, with 54% identical residues and a further 36% that are conservatively substituted. Other features of the MRP3 gene and protein are also consistent with it being the acyltransferase subunit of a 2-oxo acid dehydrogenase complex. A multiple alignment of 13 E2 sequences indicated that 120 (34%) of 353 equivalenced residues are identical or show some degree of conservation. It also identified residues that are potentially important for the structure, catalytic activity and substrate-specificity of the acyltransferases.  相似文献   

20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号