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.
Mrp2 is a protein component of the small subunit of mitochondrial ribosomes in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. We have examined the expression of Mrp2 in yeast mutants lacking mitochondrial DNA and found that the steady-state level of Mrp2 is dramatically decreased relative to wild type. These data suggest that the accumulation of Mrp2 depends on the expression of one or more mitochondrial gene products. The mitochondrial genome of S. cerevisiae encodes two components of the small ribosomal subunit, 15S rRNA and the Var1 protein, both of which are necessary for the formation of mature 37S subunits. Several studies have shown that in the absence of Var1 incomplete subunits accumulate, which lack a limited number of ribosomal proteins. Here, we show that Mrp2 is one of the proteins absent from subunits lacking Var1, indicating that Var1 plays an important role in the incorporation of Mrp2 into mitochondrial ribosomal subunits.  相似文献   

2.
Mitochondrial ribosomes are complex molecular machines indispensable for respiration. Their assembly involves the import of several dozens of mitochondrial ribosomal proteins (MRPs), encoded in the nuclear genome, into the mitochondrial matrix. Proteomic and structural data as well as computational predictions indicate that up to 25% of yeast MRPs do not have a conventional N‐terminal mitochondrial targeting signal (MTS). We experimentally characterized a set of 15 yeast MRPs in vivo and found that five use internal MTSs. Further analysis of a conserved model MRP, Mrp17/bS6m, revealed the identity of the internal targeting signal. Similar to conventional MTS‐containing proteins, the internal sequence mediates binding to TOM complexes. The entire sequence of Mrp17 contains positive charges mediating translocation. The fact that these sequence properties could not be reliably predicted by standard methods shows that mitochondrial protein targeting is more versatile than expected. We hypothesize that structural constraints imposed by ribosome assembly interfaces may have disfavored N‐terminal presequences and driven the evolution of internal targeting signals in MRPs.  相似文献   

3.
The yeast mitochondrial Oxa1 protein is a member of the conserved Oxa1/YidC/Alb3 protein family involved in the membrane insertion of proteins. Oxa1 mediates the insertion of proteins (nuclearly and mitochondrially encoded) into the inner membrane. The mitochondrially encoded substrates interact directly with Oxa1 during their synthesis as nascent chains and in a manner that is supported by the associated ribosome. We have investigated if the Oxa1 complex interacts with the mitochondrial ribosome. Evidence to support a physical association between Oxa1 and the large ribosomal subunit is presented. Our data indicate that the matrix-exposed C-terminal region of Oxa1 plays an important role supporting the ribosomal-Oxa1 interaction. Truncation of this C-terminal segment compromises the ability of Oxa1 to support insertion of substrate proteins into the inner membrane. Oxa1 can be cross-linked to Mrp20, a component of the large ribosomal subunit. Mrp20 is homologous to L23, a subunit located next to the peptide exit tunnel of the ribosome. We propose that the interaction of Oxa1 with the ribosome serves to enhance a coupling of translation and membrane insertion events.  相似文献   

4.
Mitochondrial ribosomal proteins were studied best in yeast, where the small subunit was shown to contain about 35 proteins. Yet, genetic and biochemical studies identified only 14 proteins, half of which were predictable by sequence homology with prokaryotic ribosomal components of the small subunit. Using a recently described affinity purification technique and tagged versions of yeast Ykl155c and Mrp1, we isolated this mitochondrial ribosomal subunit and identified a total of 20 proteins, of which 12 are new. For a subset of the newly described ribosomal proteins, we showed that they are localized in mitochondria and are required for the respiratory competency of the yeast cells. This brings to 26 the total number of proteins described as components of the mitochondrial small ribosomal subunit. Remarkably, almost half of the previously and newly identified mitochondrial ribosomal components showed no similarity to any known ribosomal protein. Homologues could be found, however, in predicted protein sequences from Schizosaccharomyces pombe. In more distant species, putative homologues were detected for Ykl155c, which shares conserved motifs with uncharacterized proteins of higher eukaryotes including humans. Another newly identified ribosomal protein, Ygl129c, was previously shown to be a member of the DAP-3 family of mitochondrial apoptosis mediators.  相似文献   

5.
The involvement of mitochondrial protein synthesis in the assembly of the mitochondrial ribosomes was investigated by studying the extent to which the assembly process can proceed in petite mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae which lack mitochondrial protein synthetic activity due to the deletion of some tRNA genes and/or one of the rRNA genes on the mtDNA. Petite strains which retain the 15-S rRNA gene can synthesize this rRNA species, but do not contain any detectable amounts of the small mitochondrial ribosomal subunit. Instead, a ribonucleoparticle with a sedimentation coefficient of 30 S (instead of 37 S) was observed. This ribonucleoparticle contained all the small ribosomal subunit proteins with the exception of the var1 and three to five other proteins, which indicates that the 30-S ribonucleoparticle is related to the small mitochondrial ribosomal subunit (37 S). Reconstitution experiments using the 30-S particle and the large mitochondrial ribosomal subunit from a wild-type yeast strain indicate that the 30-S particle is not active in translating the artificial message poly(U). The large mitochondrial ribosomal subunit was present in petite strains retaining the 21-S rRNA gene. The petite 54-S subunit is biologically active in the translation of poly(U) when reconstituted with the small subunit (37 S) from a wild-type strain. The above results indicate that mitochondrial protein synthetic activity is essential for the assembly of the mature small ribosomal subunit, but not for the large subunit. Since the var1 protein is the only mitochondrial translation product known to date to be associated with the mitochondrial ribosomes, the results suggest that this protein is essential for the assembly of the mature small subunit.  相似文献   

6.
The involvement of mitochondrial protein synthesis in the assembly of the mitochondrial ribosomes was investigated by studying the extent to which the assembly process can proceed in the presence of mitochondrial protein synthesis inhibitors erythromycin and chloramphenicol. Yeast cells grown in the presence of erythromycin (2 mg/ml) do not appear to contain any detectable amounts of the mitochondrial small (37 S) ribosomal subunit. Instead, a ribonucleoparticle with a sedimentation coefficient of 30 S was observed; this particle could be shown to be related to the mitochondrial small ribosomal subunit by two-dimensional gel electrophoretic analysis of its protein components. Since the var1 protein is the only mitochondrial translation product known to be associated with the mitochondrial ribosome, our results suggest that this protein is essential for the assembly of the mature small subunit, and that the var1 protein enters the pathway for the assembly of the small subunit at a late step. In at least one strain of yeast the accumulation of the 30-S particle appears to be very sensitive to catabolite repression. When yeast cells are grown in the presence of chloramphenicol instead of erythromycin, assembly of the small subunit appears to be only partially inhibited, and the presence of the 30-S particle could not be clearly demonstrated. This observation is consistent with the fact that in yeast, chloramphenicol inhibits mitochondrial protein synthesis by about 95% only and that the synthesis of the var1 protein appears to be the least sensitive to this inhibition.  相似文献   

7.
Peroxynitrite is a reactive nitrogen species that can mediate protein tyrosine nitration, inactivating many proteins. We show that yeast mitochondrial peroxiredoxin (Prx1p), which belongs to the group 1-Cys-Prx, has thioredoxin-dependent peroxynitrite reductase activity. This activity was characterised in vitro with the recombinant mitochondrial Prx1p, the thioredoxin reductase Trr2p and the thioredoxin Trx3p, using a generator of peroxynitrite (SIN-1). Purified mitochondria from wild-type and null Prx1p or Trx3p yeast strains, exposed to SIN-1, showed a differential inactivation of manganese-containing superoxide dismutase activity. The above yeast strains were exposed to SIN-1 and examined under confocal microscopy. Prx1p or Trx3p-null cells showed a greater accumulation of peroxynitrite than wild-type ones. Our results indicate that this 1-Cys-Prx is a peroxynitrite reductase activity that uses reducing equivalents from NADPH through the mitochondrial thioredoxin system. Therefore, mitochondrial 1-Cys-peroxiredoxin/thioredoxin system constitutes an essential antioxidant defence against oxidative and nitrosative stress in yeast mitochondria.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
Nolden M  Ehses S  Koppen M  Bernacchia A  Rugarli EI  Langer T 《Cell》2005,123(2):277-289
AAA proteases comprise a conserved family of membrane bound ATP-dependent proteases that ensures the quality control of mitochondrial inner-membrane proteins. Inactivation of AAA proteases causes pleiotropic phenotypes in various organisms, including respiratory deficiencies, mitochondrial morphology defects, and axonal degeneration in hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP). The molecular basis of these defects, however, remained unclear. Here, we describe a regulatory role of an AAA protease for mitochondrial protein synthesis in yeast. The mitochondrial ribosomal protein MrpL32 is processed by the m-AAA protease, allowing its association with preassembled ribosomal particles and completion of ribosome assembly in close proximity to the inner membrane. Maturation of MrpL32 and mitochondrial protein synthesis are also impaired in a HSP mouse model lacking the m-AAA protease subunit paraplegin, demonstrating functional conservation. Our findings therefore rationalize mitochondrial defects associated with m-AAA protease mutants in yeast and shed new light on the mechanism of axonal degeneration in HSP.  相似文献   

10.
Peroxiredoxins are ubiquitously expressed proteins that reduce hydroperoxides using disulfur-reducing compounds as electron donors. Peroxiredoxins (Prxs) have been classified in two groups dependent on the presence of either one (1-Cys Prx) or two (2-Cys Prx) conserved cysteine residues. Moreover, 2-Cys Prxs, also named thioredoxin peroxidases, have peroxide reductase activity with the use of thioredoxin as biological electron donor. However, the biological reducing agent for the 1-Cys Prx has not yet been identified. We report here the characterization of a 1-Cys Prx from yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae that we have named Prx1p. Prx1p is located in mitochondria, and it is overexpressed when cells use the respiratory pathway, as well as in response to oxidative stress conditions. We show also that Prx1p has peroxide reductase activity in vitro using the yeast mitochondrial thioredoxin system as electron donor. In addition, a mutated form of Prx1p containing the absolutely conserved cysteine as the only cysteine residue also shows thioredoxin-dependent peroxide reductase activity. This is the first example of 1-Cys Prx that has thioredoxin peroxidase activity. Finally, exposure of null Prx1p mutant cells to oxidant conditions reveals an important role of the mitochondrial 1-Cys Prx in protection against oxidative stress.  相似文献   

11.
An investigation of the role of the var1 protein in the assembly of the yeast mitochondrial ribosomes was carried out in a temperature conditional mutant, strain h56, which contains a mutation (tsv1) just upstream of the structural gene for the var1 protein. The mutation results in a marked decrease in the synthesis of the var1 protein at the permissive temperature of 28 degrees C and an apparently complete absence of var1 synthesis at the restrictive temperature of 36 degrees C. Long-term growth of strain h56 at the non-permissive temperature was found to result in the loss of the small (37 S) ribosomal subunit and the appearance of a novel 30 S ribonucleoparticle. Both the small (37 S) and the large (54 S) mitochondrial ribosomal subunits were found to be assembled in strain h56 for at least 3 h after transfer to the non-permissive temperature.  相似文献   

12.
Human SCO1 and SCO2 are copper-binding proteins involved in the assembly of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase (COX). We have determined the crystal structure of the conserved, intermembrane space core portion of apo-hSCO1 to 2.8 A. It is similar to redox active proteins, including thioredoxins (Trx) and peroxiredoxins (Prx), with putative copper-binding ligands located at the same positions as the conserved catalytic residues in Trx and Prx. SCO1 does not have disulfide isomerization or peroxidase activity, but both hSCO1 and a sco1 null in yeast show extreme sensitivity to hydrogen peroxide. Of the six missense mutations in SCO1 and SCO2 associated with fatal mitochondrial disorders, one lies in a highly conserved exposed surface away from the copper-binding region, suggesting that this region is involved in protein-protein interactions. These data suggests that SCO functions not as a COX copper chaperone, but rather as a mitochondrial redox signaling molecule.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
We have purified a small subunit mitochondrial ribosomal protein, MRPS28p, from the yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Sequence from the amino terminus of MRPS28p was used to design a degenerate oligonucleotide that was complementary to the MRPS28 gene. The MRPS28 gene was isolated and its sequence determined. The MRPS28 sequence encodes a 28 kDa protein that has a region of homology with ribosomal protein S15 of E. coli. This region spans the entire length of the E. coli protein, but as MRPS28p is larger, includes only the portion of the MRPS28p sequence from amino acids 150 to 238. Based on this homology, we predict that MRPS28p, like E. coli S15, interacts directly with small subunit rRNA and functions as an early protein in ribosome assembly. Cells carrying a disrupted chromosomal copy of MRPS28 are unable to respire and spontaneously lose portions of their mitochondrial genomes at a high frequency. These phenotypes are consistent with an essential role for MRPS28p in the assembly and/or function of the mitochondrial ribosome.  相似文献   

15.
The Oxa1 protein plays a central role in facilitating the cotranslational insertion of the nascent polypeptide chains into the mitochondrial inner membrane. Mitochondrially encoded proteins are synthesized on matrix-localized ribosomes which are tethered to the inner membrane and in physical association with the Oxa1 protein. In the present study we used a chemical cross-linking approach to map the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Oxa1-ribosome interface, and we demonstrate here a close association of Oxa1 and the large ribosomal subunit protein, MrpL40. Evidence to indicate that a close physical and functional relationship exists between MrpL40 and another large ribosomal protein, the Mrp20/L23 protein, is also provided. MrpL40 shares sequence features with the bacterial ribosomal protein L24, which like Mrp20/L23 is known to be located adjacent to the ribosomal polypeptide exit site. We propose therefore that MrpL40 represents the Saccharomyces cerevisiae L24 homolog. MrpL40, like many mitochondrial ribosomal proteins, contains a C-terminal extension region that bears no similarity to the bacterial counterpart. We show that this C-terminal mitochondria-specific region is important for MrpL40''s ability to support the synthesis of the correct complement of mitochondrially encoded proteins and their subsequent assembly into oxidative phosphorylation complexes.The mitochondrial genome encodes a small, but important, number of proteins (8). These proteins are predominantly essential components of the mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) machinery. In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae the proteins encoded by the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) include cytochrome c oxidase subunits Cox1, Cox2, and Cox3, cytochrome b of the cytochrome bc1 complex, F1Fo-ATP synthase subunits Atp6, Atp8, and Atp9, and the small ribosomal subunit component Var1. With the exception of Var1, these mitochondrially encoded proteins are integral membrane proteins which become inserted into the inner membrane during their synthesis on mitochondrial ribosomes tethered to the inner membrane (11, 19, 29, 32, 34). The cotranslational membrane insertion of these proteins is achieved by maintaining a close physical association of the ribosomes to the inner membrane at sites where the insertion machinery exists (19, 31, 32).Oxa1 is an inner membrane protein that forms a central component of the insertion machinery, whose presence is required for the cotranslational membrane insertion of the mitochondrially encoded proteins (4-6, 15-17). The Oxa1 protein has been shown to physically associate with the ribosomes and more specifically with the large ribosomal subunit. Matrix-exposed elements of the Oxa1 protein, such as its hydrophilic C-terminal tail, support this Oxa1-ribosome interaction (19, 32). Furthermore, in intact mitochondria we have previously demonstrated that Oxa1 can be chemically cross-linked to Mrp20, a component of the large ribosomal subunit (19). Mrp20 is homologous to the bacterial ribosomal protein L23, a component known from the structural analysis of the ribosomes to be located next to the polypeptide exit site of the large ribosomal subunit (3, 10, 23, 27, 30). Thus, it was concluded that Oxa1, the site of membrane insertion into the inner membrane, exists in close physical proximity to the large ribosomal subunit and specifically to that region of the ribosomes where the nascent chain emerges. This close physical relationship between ribosomal components and the Oxa1 insertion site has been proposed to support a tight coordination between the protein translation and membrane insertion events (19, 31, 32). Given the strong hydrophobicity of the OXPHOS complex subunits which are encoded by the mitochondrial DNA and synthesized by these ribosomes, a close coupling of the translation and insertion events is proposed to ensure that the hydrophobic nascent chains are directly inserted into the membrane during their synthesis. The exposure of hydrophobic nascent chains to the hydrophilic matrix space may promote their aggregation and thus incompetency for subsequence membrane insertion.In bacteria, the L23 protein has been implicated to play a direct role in the cotranslational insertion of proteins into the membrane (7, 13, 24, 33). Thus, it is possible that proteins adjacent to the polypeptide exit site of mitochondrial ribosomes may be directly involved in targeting ribosomes to specific regions of the inner membrane where the membrane insertion and subsequent assembly events occur. The mitochondrial ribosomes resemble their prokaryotic ancestors in some respects, e.g., antibiotic sensitivity, but they differ in a number of important ways (1, 12, 22, 30). In general, the protein content of the mitochondrial ribosomes is greater than their bacterial counterparts. This increase in protein content is largely attributed to the fact that the mitochondrial ribosomal proteins are larger in size than their bacterial homologs. Over the course of evolution, many of the mitochondrial ribosomal proteins have acquired novel extensions, new domains, in addition to their bacterial homology domains. These acquired extensions not only include N-terminal (often cleavable) signals to target these proteins (nuclear encoded) to the mitochondria but also in many instances large C-terminal extensions, which are unique to the mitochondrial ribosomal proteins and have thus been termed “mitospecific domains” (12, 30). Largely uncharacterized, the functional relevance of these various mitospecific domains of the ribosomal proteins remains unknown. It is speculated that some (or all) of these mitospecific domains serve to ensure that the ribosome becomes assembled and is translationally active while bound to the inner membrane surface.In the present study we sought to further characterize the interaction of the mitochondrial ribosome with the Oxa1 protein. We show here that MrpL40, a large ribosomal subunit component, is physically close to both the Mrp20 and Oxa1 proteins, demonstrating the proximity of MrpL40 to both the ribosomal polypeptide exit site and the Oxa1 membrane insertion site. MrpL40 contains a large C-terminal mitospecific domain, which includes a predicted α-helical region at its extreme C-terminal end. The results presented here highlight that the integrity of this domain of MrpL40 is crucial to ensure ribosome translational fidelity and subsequent OXPHOS complex assembly.  相似文献   

16.
We demonstrate here that mitoribosomal protein synthesis, responsible for the synthesis of oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) subunits encoded by the mitochondrial genome, occurs at high levels during glycolysis fermentation and in a manner uncoupled from OXPHOS complex assembly regulation. Furthermore, we provide evidence that the mitospecific domain of Mrp7 (bL27), a mitoribosomal component, is required to maintain mitochondrial protein synthesis during fermentation but is not required under respiration growth conditions. Maintaining mitotranslation under high-glucose-fermentation conditions also involves Mam33 (p32/gC1qR homologue), a binding partner of Mrp7’s mitospecific domain, and together they confer a competitive advantage for a cell’s ability to adapt to respiration-based metabolism when glucose becomes limiting. Furthermore, our findings support that the mitoribosome, and specifically the central protuberance region, may be differentially regulated and/or assembled, under the different metabolic conditions of fermentation and respiration. On the basis of our findings, we propose that the purpose of mitotranslation is not limited to the assembly of OXPHOS complexes, but also plays a role in mitochondrial signaling critical for switching cellular metabolism from a glycolysis- to a respiration-based state.  相似文献   

17.
Pakhomova ON  Yeh LC  Monette J  Lee JC 《Biochimie》1999,81(11):1015-1023
Binding of yeast ribosomal protein L5 with 5S rRNA has long been considered a promising model for studying molecular mechanisms of protein-RNA interactions. However, in vitro assembly of a ribonucleoprotein (RNP) complex from purified yeast ribosomal protein L5 (also known as L1, L1a, or YL3) and 5S rRNA proved to be difficult, thus limiting the utility of this model. In the present report, we present data on the successful in vitro assembly of a RNP complex using a fusion (MBP-L5) protein consisting of the yeast ribosomal protein L5 fused to the carboxyl terminus of the E. coli maltose-binding protein (MBP). We demonstrated that: 1) the MBP-L5 protein binds yeast 5S rRNA but not 5.8S rRNA in vitro; 2) the MBP protein itself does not bind yeast 5S rRNA; 3) formation of the RNP complex is proportional to the concentration of MBP-L5 protein and 5S rRNA; and 4) the MBP moiety of the fusion protein in the RNP complex can be removed with factor Xa. The electrophoretic mobility of the resultant RNP complex is indistinguishable from that of L5-5S rRNA complex isolated from the ribosome. Using this new experimental approach, we further showed that the RNA binding capability of a mutant L5 protein is decreased by 60% compared to the wild-type protein. Additionally, the mutant RNP complex migrates slower than the wild-type RNP complex suggesting that the mutant RNP complex has a less compact conformation. The finding provides a probable explanation for an earlier observation that the 60S ribosomal subunit containing the mutant protein is unstable.  相似文献   

18.
19.
Cox11 is an intrinsic mitochondrial membrane protein essential for the assembly of an active cytochrome c oxidase complex. Cox11 is tethered to the mitochondrial inner membrane by a single transmembrane helix. Domain mapping was carried out to determine the functional segments of the Cox11 protein. The C-terminal 189 residue Cu(I)-binding domain is shown to be exposed within the mitochondrial intermembrane space. This orientation was demonstrated by the proteolytic susceptibility of a C-terminal Myc epitope tag in mitoplasts but not intact mitochondria. Fusion of the N terminus of Cox11 to the matrix ribosomal protein Rsm22 results in a functional protein capable of suppressing the respiratory defect of both Deltacox11 cells and Deltarsm22 cells. The functionality of the fusion protein suggests that the Cox11 N terminus projects into the matrix. The fusion of the C-terminal segment of Cox11 to Rsm22 resembles a naturally occurring fusion of Cox11 in Schizosaccharomyces pombe to a sequence homologous to the Saccharomyces cerevisiae Rsm22. Studies on a series of SCO1/COX11 chimeras reveal that the matrix domain of Cox11 lacks a specific function, whereas the Cu(I) binding/donating function requires the yeast Cox11 sequence. The Cu(I)-binding domain from human Cox11 cannot functionally replace the yeast sequence. The copper domain of Cox11 may be an important docking motif for Cox1 or a Cox1-associated protein.  相似文献   

20.
Four different classes of mammalian mitochondrial ribosomal proteins were identified and characterized. Mature proteins were purified from bovine liver and subjected to N-terminal or matrix-assisted laser-desorption mass spectroscopic amino acid sequencing after tryptic in-gel digestion and high pressure liquid chromatography separation of the resulting peptides. Peptide sequences obtained were used to virtually screen expressed sequence tag data bases from human, mouse, and rat. Consensus cDNAs were assembled in silico from various expressed sequence tag sequences identified. Deduced mammalian protein sequences were characterized and compared with ribosomal protein sequences of Escherichia coli and yeast mitochondria. Significant sequence similarities to ribosomal proteins of other sources were detected for three out of four different mammalian protein classes determined. However, the sequence conservation between mitochondrial ribosomal proteins of mammalian and yeast origin is much less than the sequence conservation between cytoplasmic ribosomal proteins of the same species. In particular, this is shown for the mammalian counterparts of the E. coli EcoL2 ribosomal protein (MRP-L14), that do not conserve the specific and functional highly important His(229) residue of E. coli and the corresponding yeast mitochondrial Rml2p.  相似文献   

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