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1.
RNAs that function in mitochondria are typically encoded by the mitochondrial DNA. However, the mitochondrial tRNAs of Trypanosoma brucei are encoded by the nuclear DNA and therefore must be imported into the mitochondrion. It is becoming evident that RNA import into mitochondria is phylogenetically widespread and is essential for cellular processes, but virtually nothing is known about the mechanism of RNA import. We have identified and characterized mitochondrial precursor tRNAs in T. brucei. The identification of mitochondrially located precursor tRNAs clearly indicates that mitochondrial tRNAs are imported as precursors. The mitochondrial precursor tRNAs hybridize to cloned nuclear tRNA genes, label with [alpha-32P]CTP using yeast tRNA nucleotidyltransferase and in isolated mitochondria via an endogenous nucleotidyltransferase-like activity, and are processed to mature tRNAs by Escherichia coli and yeast mitochondrial RNase P. We show that T. brucei mitochondrial extract contains an RNase P activity capable of processing a prokaryotic tRNA precursor as well as the T. brucei tRNA precursors. Precursors for tRNA(Asn) and tRNA(Leu) were detected on Northern blots of mitochondrial RNA, and the 5' ends of these RNAs were characterized by primer extension analysis. The structure of the precursor tRNAs and the significance of nuclear encoded precursor tRNAs within the mitochondrion are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
All of the mitochondrial tRNAs of Trypanosoma brucei have been shown to be encoded in the nucleus and must be imported into the mitochondrion. The import of nuclearly encoded tRNAs into the mitochondrion has been demonstrated in a variety of organisms and is essential for proper function in the mitochondrion. An in vitro import assay has been developed to study the pathway of tRNA import in T. brucei. The in vitro system utilizes crude isolated trypanosome mitochondria and synthetic RNAs transcribed from a cloned nucleus-encoded tRNA gene cluster. The substrate, composed of tRNA(Ser) and tRNA(Leu), is transcribed in tandem with a 59-nucleotide intergenic region. The tandem tRNA substrate is imported rapidly, while the mature-size tRNA(Leu) fails to be imported in this system. These results suggest that the preferred substrate for tRNA import into trypanosome mitochondria is a precursor molecule composed of tandemly linked tRNAs. Import of the tandem tRNA substrate requires (i) a protein component that is associated with the surface of the mitochondrion, (ii) ATP pools both outside and within the mitochondrion, and (iii) a membrane potential. Dissipation of the proton gradient across the inner mitochondrial membrane by treatment with an uncoupling agent inhibits import of the tandem tRNA substrate. Characterization of the import requirements indicates that mitochondrial RNA import proceeds by a pathway including a protein component associated with the outer mitochondrial membrane, ATP-dependent steps, and a mitochondrial membrane potential.  相似文献   

3.
The mitochondrial genome of Trypanosoma brucei does not encode any tRNAs. Instead, mitochondrial tRNAs are synthesized in the nucleus and subsequently imported into mitochondria. The great majority of mitochondrial tRNAs have cytosolic counterparts showing identical primary sequences. The only difference found between mitochondrial and cytosolic isotypes of the tRNAs are mitochondria-specific nucleotide modifications which appear to be a common feature of imported tRNAs in trypanosomes. In this study, a mutated yeast cytosolic tRNAHis was expressed in trypanosomes and its import phenotype was analyzed by cell fractionation and nuclease treatment of intact mitochondria. Furthermore, cytosolic and mitochondrial isotypes of the yeast tRNA(His) were specifically labeled and analyzed by limited alkaline hydrolysis. These experiments revealed the presence of mitochondria-specific nucleotide modifications in the yeast tRNA(His). The positions of the modifications were determined by direct enzymatic sequencing of the tRNA(His) and shown to correspond to the ultimate and penultimate nucleotides before the anticodon, the same relative positions which are modified in the mitochondrial isotype of trypanosomal tRNA(Tyr). The results demonstrate that covalent modification of tRNAs; in trypanosomal mitochondria can be used, in analogy to processing of precursor proteins during mitochondrial protein import, as a marker for import of both endogenous and heterologous tRNAs.  相似文献   

4.
The parasitic protozoa Trypanosoma brucei has a complex life cycle. Oxidative phosphorylation is highly active in the procyclic form but absent from bloodstream cells. The mitochondrial genome encodes several gene products that are required for oxidative phosphorylation, but it completely lacks tRNA genes. For mitochondrial translation to occur, the import of cytosolic tRNAs is therefore essential for procyclic T. brucei. Whether the same is true for the bloodstream form has not been studied so far. Here we show that the steady-state levels of mitochondrial tRNAs are essentially the same in both life stages. Editing of the imported tRNA(Trp) also occurs in both forms as well as in mitochondria of Trypanosoma evansi, which lacks a genome and a translation system. These results show that mitochondrial tRNA import is a constitutive process that must be mediated by proteins that are expressed in both forms of the life cycle and that are not encoded in the mitochondrial genome. Moreover, bloodstream cells lacking either mitochondria-specific translation elongation factor Tu or mitochondrial tryptophanyl-tRNA synthetase are not viable indicating that mitochondrial translation is also essential in this stage. Both of these proteins show trypanosomatid-specific features and may therefore be excellent novel drug targets.  相似文献   

5.
R Hauser  A Schneider 《The EMBO journal》1995,14(17):4212-4220
The mitochondrial genome of Trypanosoma brucei does not encode any identifiable tRNAs. Instead, mitochondrial tRNAs are synthesized in the nucleus and subsequently imported into mitochondria. In order to analyse the signals which target the tRNAs into the mitochondria, an in vivo import system has been developed: tRNA variants were expressed episomally and their import into mitochondria assessed by purification and nuclease treatment of the mitochondrial fraction. Three tRNA genes were tested in this system: (i) a mutated version of the trypanosomal tRNA(Tyr); (ii) a cytosolic tRNA(His) of yeast; and (iii) a human cytosolic tRNA(Lys). The tRNAs were expressed in their own genomic context, or containing various lengths of the 5'-flanking sequence of the trypanosomal tRNA(Tyr) gene. In all cases efficient import of each of the tRNAs was observed. We independently confirmed the mitochondrial import of the yeast tRNA(His), since in organello [alpha-32P]ATP-labelling of the 3'-end of the tRNA was inhibited by carboxyatractyloside, a highly specific inhibitor of the mitochondrial adenine nucleotide translocator. Import of heterologous tRNAs in their own genomic contexts supports the conclusion that no specific targeting signals are necessary to import tRNAs into mitochondria of T. brucei, but rather that the tRNA structure itself is sufficient to specify import.  相似文献   

6.
The mitochondrial genome of Trypanosoma brucei does not appear to encode any tRNA genes. Isolated organellar tRNAs hybridize to nuclear DNA, suggesting that they are synthesized in the nucleus and subsequently imported into the mitochondrion. Most imported tRNAs have cytosolic counterparts, showing identical mobility on two-dimensional polyacrylamide gels. We have compared three nuclear-encoded mitochondrial tRNAs (tRNA(Lys), tRNA(Leu), tRNA(Tyr)) with their cytosolic isoforms by direct enzymatic sequence analysis. Our findings indicate that the primary sequences of the mitochondrial and the corresponding cytosolic tRNAs are identical. However, we have identified a mitochondrion-specific nucleotide modification of each tRNA which is localized to a conserved cytidine residue at the penultimate position 5' of the anticodon. The modification present in mature mitochondrial tRNA(Tyr) was not found in a mutant tRNA(Tyr) defective in splicing in either cytosolic or mitochondrial fractions. The mutant tRNA(Tyr) has been expressed in transformed cells and its import into mitochondria has been demonstrated, suggesting that the modified cytidine residue is not required for import and therefore may be involved in adapting imported tRNAs to specific requirements of the mitochondrial translation machinery.  相似文献   

7.
Mitochondrial tRNA import is widespread in eukaryotes. Yet, the mechanism that determines its specificity is unknown. Previous in vivo experiments using the tRNAs(Met), tRNA(Ile) and tRNA(Lys) have suggested that the T-stem nucleotide pair 51:63 is the main localization determinant of tRNAs in Trypanosoma brucei. In the cytosol-specific initiator tRNA(Met), this nucleotide pair is identical to the main antideterminant that prevents interaction with cytosolic elongation factor (eEF1a). Here we show that ablation of cytosolic eEF1a, but not of initiation factor 2, inhibits mitochondrial import of newly synthesized tRNAs well before translation or growth is affected. tRNA(Sec) is the only other cytosol-specific tRNA in T. brucei. It has its own elongation factor and does not bind eEF1a. However, a mutant of the tRNA(Sec) expected to bind to eEF1a is imported into mitochondria. This import requires eEF1a and aminoacylation of the tRNA. Thus, for a tRNA to be imported into the mitochondrion of T. brucei, it needs to bind eEF1a, and it is this interaction that mediates the import specificity.  相似文献   

8.
9.
The mitochondrial genome of Trypanosoma brucei does not encode tRNAs. Consequently, all mitochondrial tRNAs are imported from the cytosol and originate from nucleus-encoded genes. Analysis of all currently available T. brucei sequences revealed that its genome carries 50 tRNA genes representing 40 different isoacceptors. The identified set is expected to be nearly complete since all but four codons are accounted for. The number of tRNA genes in T. brucei is very low for a eukaryote and lower than those of many prokaryotes. Using quantitative Northern analysis we have determined the absolute abundance in the cell and the mitochondrion of a group of 15 tRNAs specific for 12 amino acids. Except for the initiator type tRNA(Met), which is cytosol specific, the cytosolic and the mitochondrial sets of tRNAs were qualitatively identical. However, the extent of mitochondrial localization was variable for the different tRNAs, ranging from 1 to 7.5% per cell. Finally, by using transgenic cell lines in combination with quantitative Northern analysis it was shown that import of tRNA(Leu)(CAA) is independent of its 5'-genomic context, suggesting that the in vivo import substrate corresponds to the mature, fully processed tRNA.  相似文献   

10.
The mitochondrial genome of Trypanosoma brucei does not contain genes encoding tRNAs; instead this protozoan parasite must import nuclear-encoded tRNAs from the cytosol for mitochondrial translation. Previously, it has been shown that mitochondrial tRNA import requires ATP hydrolysis and a proteinaceous mitochondrial membrane component. However, little is known about the mitochondrial membrane proteins involved in tRNA binding and translocation into the mitochondrion. Here we report the purification of a mitochondrial membrane complex using tRNA affinity purification and have identified several protein components of the putative tRNA translocon by mass spectrometry. Using an in vivo tRNA import assay in combination with RNA interference, we have verified that two of these proteins, Tb11.01.4590 and Tb09.v1.0420, are involved in mitochondrial tRNA import. Using Protein C Epitope -Tobacco Etch Virus-Protein A Epitope (PTP)-tagged Tb11.01.4590, additional associated proteins were identified including Tim17 and other mitochondrial proteins necessary for mitochondrial protein import. Results presented here identify and validate two novel protein components of the putative tRNA translocon and provide additional evidence that mitochondrial tRNA and protein import have shared components in trypanosomes.  相似文献   

11.
Trypanosome alternative oxidase (TAO) and the cytochrome oxidase (COX) are two developmentally regulated terminal oxidases of the mitochondrial electron transport chain in Trypanosoma brucei. Here, we have compared the import of TAO and cytochrome oxidase subunit IV (COIV), two stage-specific nuclear encoded mitochondrial proteins, into the bloodstream and procyclic form mitochondria of T. brucei to understand the import processes in two different developmental stages. Under in vitro conditions TAO and COIV were imported and processed into isolated mitochondria from both the bloodstream and procyclic forms. With mitochondria isolated from the procyclic form, the import of TAO and COIV was dependent on the mitochondrial inner membrane potential (delta psi) and required protein(s) on the outer membrane. Import of these proteins also depended on the presence of both internal and external ATP. However, import of TAO and COIV into isolated mitochondria from the bloodstream form was not inhibited after the mitochondrial delta psi was dissipated by valinomycin, CCCP, or valinomycin and oligomycin in combination. In contrast, import of these proteins into bloodstream mitochondria was abolished after the hydrolysis of ATP by apyrase or removal of the ATP and ATP-generating system, suggesting that import is dependent on the presence of external ATP. Together, these data suggest that nuclear encoded proteins such as TAO and COIV are imported in the mitochondria of the bloodstream and the procyclic forms via different mechanism. Differential import conditions of nuclear encoded mitochondrial proteins of T. brucei possibly help it to adapt to different life forms.  相似文献   

12.
Mitochondrial tRNA import is widespread, but mechanistic insights of how tRNAs are translocated across mitochondrial membranes remain scarce. The parasitic protozoan T. brucei lacks mitochondrial tRNA genes. Consequently, it imports all organellar tRNAs from the cytosol. Here we investigated the connection between tRNA and protein translocation across the mitochondrial inner membrane. Trypanosomes have a single inner membrane protein translocase that consists of three heterooligomeric submodules, which all are required for import of matrix proteins. In vivo depletion of individual submodules shows that surprisingly only the integral membrane core module, including the protein import pore, but not the presequence-associated import motor are required for mitochondrial tRNA import. Thus we could uncouple import of matrix proteins from import of tRNAs even though both substrates are imported into the same mitochondrial subcompartment. This is reminiscent to the outer membrane where the main protein translocase but not on-going protein translocation is required for tRNA import. We also show that import of tRNAs across the outer and inner membranes are coupled to each other. Taken together, these data support the ‘alternate import model’, which states that tRNA and protein import while mechanistically independent use the same translocation pores but not at the same time.  相似文献   

13.
In most eukaryotic organisms, cytochrome c(1) is encoded in the nucleus, translated on cytosolic ribosomes, and directed to its final destination in the mitochondrial inner membrane by a bipartite, cleaved, amino-terminal presequence. However, in the kinetoplastids and euglenoids, the cytochrome c(1) protein has been shown to lack a cleaved presequence; a single methionine is removed from the amino terminus upon maturation, and the sequence upstream of the heme-binding site is generally shorter than that of the other eukaryotic homologs. We have used a newly developed mitochondrial protein import assay system from Trypanosoma brucei to demonstrate that the T. brucei cytochrome c(1) protein is imported along a non-conservative pathway similar to that described for the inner membrane carrier proteins of other organisms. This pathway requires external ATP and an external protein receptor but is not absolutely dependent on a membrane potential or on ATP hydrolysis in the mitochondrial matrix. We propose the cytochrome c(1) import in T. brucei is a two-step process first involving a membrane potential independent translocation across the outer mitochondrial membrane followed by heme attachment and a membrane potential-dependent insertion into the inner membrane.  相似文献   

14.
In higher plants, one-third to one-half of the mitochondrial tRNAs are encoded in the nucleus and are imported into mitochondria. This process appears to be highly specific for some tRNAs, but the factors that interact with tRNAs before and/or during import, as well as the signals present on the tRNAs, still need to be identified. The rare experiments performed so far suggest that, besides the probable implication of aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, at least one additional import factor and/or structural features shared by imported tRNAs must be involved in plant mitochondrial tRNA import. To look for determinants that direct tRNA import into higher plant mitochondria, we have transformed BY2 tobacco cells with Arabidopsis thaliana cytosolic tRNA(Val)(AAC) carrying various mutations. The nucleotide replacements introduced in this naturally imported tRNA correspond to the anticodon and/or D-domain of the non-imported cytosolic tRNA(Met-e). Unlike the wild-type tRNA(Val)(AAC), a mutant tRNA(Val) carrying a methionine CAU anticodon that switches the aminoacylation of this tRNA from valine to methionine is not present in the mitochondrial fraction. Furthermore, mutant tRNAs(Val) carrying the D-domain of the tRNA(Met-e), although still efficiently recognized by the valyl-tRNA synthetase, are not imported any more into mitochondria. These data demonstrate that in plants, besides identity elements required for the recognition by the cognate aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase, tRNA molecules contain other determinants that are essential for mitochondrial import selectivity. Indeed, this suggests that the tRNA import mechanism occurring in plant mitochondria may be different from what has been described so far in yeast or in protozoa.  相似文献   

15.
Translocases of mitochondrial inner membrane (TIMs) are multiprotein complexes. The only Tim component so far characterized in kinetoplastid parasites such as Trypanosoma brucei is Tim17 (TbTim17), which is essential for cell survival and mitochondrial protein import. Here, we report that TbTim17 is present in a protein complex of about 1,100 kDa, which is much larger than the TIM complexes found in fungi and mammals. Depletion of TbTim17 in T. brucei impairs the mitochondrial import of cytochrome oxidase subunit IV, an N-terminal signal-containing protein. Pretreatment of isolated mitoplasts with the anti-TbTim17 antibody inhibited import of cytochrome oxidase subunit IV, indicating a direct involvement of the TbTim17 in the import process. Purification of the TbTim17-containing protein complex from the mitochondrial membrane of T. brucei by tandem affinity chromatography revealed that TbTim17 associates with seven unique as well as a few known T. brucei mitochondrial proteins. Depletion of three of these novel proteins, i.e. TbTim47, TbTim54, and TbTim62, significantly decreased mitochondrial protein import in vitro. In vivo targeting of a newly synthesized mitochondrial matrix protein, MRP2, was also inhibited due to depletion of TbTim17, TbTim54, and TbTim62. Co-precipitation analysis confirmed the interaction of TbTim54 and TbTim62 with TbTim17 in vivo. Overall, our data reveal that TbTim17, the single homolog of Tim17/22/23 family proteins, is present in a unique TIM complex consisting of novel proteins in T. brucei and is critical for mitochondrial protein import.  相似文献   

16.
The mitochondrial tRNAs of Trypanosoma brucei are nuclear encoded   总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17  
The mitochondrial DNA of Trypanosoma brucei is organized as a catenated network of maxicircles and minicircles. The maxicircles are equivalent to the typical mitochondrial genome except that the genes for the mitochondrial tRNAs have not been identified by sequence analysis of the maxicircle DNA. The apparent absence of tRNA genes in the maxicircle DNA suggests that the mitochondrial tRNAs are encoded by either the minicircle or the nuclear DNA. In order to determine their genomic origin, we isolated and identified the mitochondrial tRNAs of T. brucei. We show that these mitochondrial tRNAs are truly mitochondrially located in vivo and that they are free from detectable contamination by cytosolic RNAs. By hybridization analysis, using mitochondrial tRNAs as the probe, we determined that the mitochondrial tRNAs are encoded by nuclear DNA. This implies that RNAs, like proteins, are imported into the mitochondria. We investigated the relationship between the cytosolic and the mitochondrial tRNA genes and show that there are unique cytosolic tRNA genes, unique mitochondrial tRNA genes, and tRNA genes which appear to be shared and whose products are therefore targeted to both the cytosol and the mitochondrion.  相似文献   

17.
Mitochondria are found in all eukaryotic cells and derive from a bacterial endosymbiont [1, 2]. The evolution of a protein import system was a prerequisite for the conversion of the endosymbiont into a true organelle. Tom40, the essential component of the protein translocase of the outer membrane, is conserved in mitochondria of almost all eukaryotes but lacks bacterial orthologs [3-6]. It serves as the gateway through which all mitochondrial proteins are imported. The parasitic protozoa Trypanosoma brucei and its relatives do not have a Tom40-like protein, which raises the question of how proteins are imported by their mitochondria [7, 8]. Using a combination of bioinformatics and in vivo and in vitro studies, we have discovered that T. brucei likely employs a different import channel, termed ATOM (archaic translocase of the outer mitochondrial membrane). ATOM mediates the import of nuclear-encoded proteins into mitochondria and is essential for viability of trypanosomes. It is not related to Tom40 but is instead an ortholog of a subgroup of the Omp85 protein superfamily that is involved in membrane translocation and insertion of bacterial outer membrane proteins [9]. This suggests that the protein import channel in trypanosomes is a relic of an archaic protein transport system that was operational in the ancestor of all eukaryotes.  相似文献   

18.
Apicomplexan parasites have the smallest known mitochondrial genome. It consists of a repeated element of approximately 6-7 kb in length and encodes three mitochondrial proteins, a number of rRNA fragments, but no tRNAs. It has therefore been postulated that in apicomplexans all tRNAs required for mitochondrial translation are imported from the cytosol. To provide direct evidence for this process we have established a cell fractionation procedure allowing the isolation of defined organellar RNA fractions from the apicomplexan Toxoplasma gondii. Analysis of T. gondii total and organellar RNA by Northern hybridization showed that except for the cytosol-specific initiator tRNAMet all nucleus-encoded tRNAs tested were present in the cytosol and in the mitochondrion but not in the plastid. Thus, these results provide the first experimental evidence for mitochondrial tRNA import in apicomplexans. The only other taxon that imports the whole set of mitochondrial tRNAs are the trypanosomatids. Interestingly, the initiator tRNAMet is the only cytosol-specific tRNA in trypanosomatids, indicating that the import specificity is identical in both groups. In agreement with this, the T. gondii initiator tRNAMet remained in the cytosol when expressed in Trypanosoma brucei. However, in contrast to trypanosomatids, no thio-modifications were detected in the tRNAGln of T. gondii indicating that, unlike what is suggested in Leishmania, they are not involved in regulating import.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Trypanosoma brucei lacks mitochondrial genes encoding tRNAs and must import nuclearly encoded tRNAs from the cytosol. The mechanism and specificity of this process remain unclear. We have identified a unique sequence motif, YGG(C/A)RRC, upstream of the genes encoding mitochondrially localized tRNAs in T. brucei. Both in vitro import studies and in vivo transfection studies indicate that deletion of the YGG(C/A)RRC sequence alters mitochondrial localization of tRNA(Leu), and in vivo studies also show a decrease in the cellular abundance of tRNA(Leu). These studies provide direct evidence for cis-acting RNA motifs within precursor tRNAs that facilitate the selection of tRNAs for mitochondrial import in trypanosomes. Furthermore, we found that mutations to the YGG(C/A)RRC sequence also altered the intracellular distribution of other endogenous tRNAs, suggesting a general role for this sequence in tRNA trafficking in trypanosomes.  相似文献   

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