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1.
A noncleavable signal for mitochondrial import of 3-oxoacyl-CoA thiolase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Rat 3-oxoacyl-CoA thiolase, an enzyme of the fatty acid beta-oxidation cycle, is located in the mitochondrial matrix. Unlike most mitochondrial matrix proteins, the thiolase is synthesized with no transient presequence and possesses information for mitochondrial targeting and import in the mature protein of 397 amino acid residues. cDNA sequences encoding various portions of the thiolase were fused in frame to the cDNA encoding the mature portion of rat ornithine transcarbamylase (lacking its own presequence). The fusion genes were transfected into COS cells, and subcellular localization of the fusion proteins was analyzed by cell fractionation with digitonin. When the mature portion of ornithine transcarbamylase was expressed, it was recovered in the soluble fraction. On the other hand, the fusion proteins containing the NH2-terminal 392, 161, or 61 amino acid residues of the thiolase were recovered in the particulate fraction, whereas the fusion protein containing the COOH-terminal 331 residues (residues 62-392) was recovered in the soluble fraction. Enzyme immunocytochemical and immunoelectron microscopic analyses using an anti-ornithine transcarbamylase antibody showed mitochondrial localization of the fusion proteins containing the NH2-terminal portions of the thiolase. These results indicate that the NH2-terminal 61 amino acids of rat 3-oxoacyl-CoA thiolase function as a noncleavable signal for mitochondrial targeting and import of this enzyme protein. Pulse-chase experiments showed that the ornithine transcarbamylase precursor and the thiolase traveled from the cytosol to the mitochondria with half-lives of less than 5 min, whereas the three fusion proteins traveled with half-lives of 10-15 min. Interestingly, in the cells expressing the fusion proteins, the mitochondria showed abnormal shapes and were filled with immunogold-positive crystalloid structures.  相似文献   

2.
The cytoplasmically synthesized precursor of the mitochondrial matrix enzyme, ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC), is targeted to mitochondria by its NH2-terminal leader peptide. We previously established through mutational analysis that the midportion of the OTC leader peptide is functionally required. In this article, we report that study of additional OTC precursors, altered in either a site-directed or random manner, reveals that (a) the midportion, but not the NH2-terminal half, is sufficient by itself to direct import, (b) the functional structure in the midportion is unlikely to be an amphiphilic alpha-helix, (c) the four arginines in the leader peptide contribute collectively to import function by conferring net positive charge, and (d) surprisingly, proteolytic processing of the leader peptide does not require the presence of a specific primary structure at the site of cleavage, in order to produce the mature OTC subunit.  相似文献   

3.
《The Journal of cell biology》1987,105(6):2631-2639
The mitochondrial matrix enzyme ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) is synthesized on cytoplasmic polyribosomes as a precursor (pOTC) with an NH2-terminal extension of 32 amino acids. We report here that rat pOTC synthesized in vitro is internalized and cleaved by isolated rat liver mitochondria in two, temporally separate steps. In the first step, which is dependent upon an intact mitochondrial membrane potential, pOTC is translocated into mitochondria and cleaved by a matrix protease to a product designated iOTC, intermediate in size between pOTC and mature OTC. This product is in a trypsin-protected mitochondrial location. The same intermediate-sized OTC is produced in vivo in frog oocytes injected with in vitro-synthesized pOTC. The proteolytic processing of pOTC to iOTC involves the removal of 24 amino acids from the NH2 terminus of the precursor and utilizes a cleavage site two residues away from a critical arginine residue at position 23. In a second cleavage step, also catalyzed by a matrix protease, iOTC is converted to mature OTC by removal of the remaining eight residues of leader sequence. To define the critical regions in the OTC leader peptide required for these events, we have synthesized OTC precursors with alterations in the leader. Substitution of either an acidic (aspartate) or a "helix-breaking" (glycine) amino acid residue for arginine 23 of the leader inhibits formation of both iOTC and OTC, without affecting translocation. These mutant precursors are cleaved at an otherwise cryptic cleavage site between residues 16 and 17 of the leader. Interestingly, this cleavage occurs at a site two residues away from an arginine at position 15. The data indicate that conversion of pOTC to mature OTC proceeds via the formation of a third discrete species: an intermediate-sized OTC. The data suggest further that, in the rat pOTC leader, the essential elements required for translocation differ from those necessary for correct cleavage to either iOTC or mature OTC.  相似文献   

4.
The mitochondrial matrix enzyme malate dehydrogenase (MDH) is synthesized on cytoplasmic polysomes as a larger precursor (pMDH) with an NH2-terminal leader peptide of 24 amino acids. Import of in vitro synthesized MDH into mitochondria results in formation of the mature-sized subunit. We report here that the conversion of pMDH to mMDH occurs via two distinct cleavage events within the leader peptide. First, pMDH is cleaved to an intermediate form (iMDH) of MDH. Conversion of the precursor to the intermediate form is catalyzed by a protease localized to the mitochondrial matrix. The cleavage of pMDH to iMDH involves the removal of 15 amino acids from the NH2 terminus of the pMDH leader peptide. The iMDH is subsequently cleaved, also by a matrix protease, to mature MDH in a reaction which is O-phenanthroline-sensitive. Cleavage to iMDH and to mature MDH occurs prior to completion of translocation of the MDH polypeptide chain into the mitochondrial matrix.  相似文献   

5.
We have determined the complete sequence of the rat mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase (mMDH) precursor derived from nucleotide sequence of the cDNA. A single synthetic oligodeoxynucleotide probe was used to screen a rat atrial cDNA library constructed in lambda gt10. A 1.2 kb full-length cDNA clone provided the first complete amino acid sequence of pre-mMDH. The 1014 nucleotide-long open reading frame encodes the 314 residue long mature mMDH protein and a 24 amino acid NH2-terminal extension which directs mitochondrial import and is cleaved from the precursor after import to generate mature mMDH. The amino acid composition of the transit peptide is polar and basic. The pre-mMDH transit peptide shows marked homology with those of two other enzymes targeted to the rat mitochondrial matrix.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Ornithine transcarbamylase (ornithine carbamoyltransferase, EC 2.1.3.3), the second enzyme of urea synthesis, is localized in the matrix of liver mitochondria of ureotelic animals. The enzyme is encoded by a nuclear gene, synthesized outside the mitochondria, and must then be transported into the organelle. The rat liver enzyme is initially synthesized on membrane-free polysomes in the form of a larger precursor with an amino-terminal extension of 3 400–4 000 daltons. In rat liver slices and isolated rat hepatocytes, the pulse-labeled precursor is first released into the cytosol and is then transported with a half life of 1 2 min into the mitochondria where it is proteolytically processed to the mature form of the enzyme. The precursor synthesized in vitro exists in a highly aggregated form and has a conformation different from that of the mature enzyme. The precursor has an isoelectric point (pI = 7.9) higher than that of the mature enzyme (pI = 7.2).The precursor synthesized in vitro can be taken up and processed to the mature enzyme by isolated rat liver mitochondria. The mitochondrial transport and processing system requires membrane potential and a high integrity of the mitochondria. The transport and processing activities are conserved between mammals and birds or amphibians and is presumably common to more than one precursor. Potassium ion, magnesium ion, and probably a cytosolic protein(s), in addition to the transcarbamylase precursor and the mitochondria, are required for the maximal transport and processing of the precursor.A mitochondrial matrix protease which converts the precursor to a product intermediate in size between the precursor and the mature subunit has been highly purified. The protease has an estimated molecular weight of 108 000 and an optimal pH of 7.5–8.0, and appears to be a metal protease. The protease does not cleave several of the protein and peptide substrates tested. The role of this protease in the precursor processing remains to be elucidated.Rats subjected to different levels of protein intake and to fasting show significant changes in the level of enzyme protein and activity of ornithine transcarbamylase. The dietary-dependent changes in the enzyme level are due mainly to an altered level of functional mRNA for the enzyme. In contrast, during fasting, the increase in the enzyme level is associated with a decreased level of translatable mRNA forthe enzyme.Pathological aspects of ornithine transcarbamylase including the enzyme deficiency and reduced activities of the enzyme in Reye's syndrome are also described. A possibility that impaired transport of the enzyme precursor into the mitochondria leads to a reduced enzyme activity, is proposed.Abbreviation pOTC precursor of ornithine transcarbamylase  相似文献   

7.
Mitochondrial uptake of the cytoplasmically synthesized precursor of the mammalian enzyme ornithine transcarbamylase is mediated by an N-terminal leader sequence of 32 amino acids. In the mitochondrial matrix, the precursor form is processed to the mature subunit by proteolytic removal of this pre-sequence and in the enzyme from rat liver it has been suggested that this occurs in a two-step process which involves an intermediate cleavage at residue 24. We show that deletion of residues 20-26 spanning this intermediate cleavage site prevents correct processing to the mature subunit but it does not prevent mitochondrial targeting and internalization or assembly of the incorrectly processed product into a catalytically active enzyme. The incorrectly processed enzyme, which is larger than the normal mature enzyme, is nevertheless more susceptible to proteolytic degradation in permanently transfected human cells than the correctly processed enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
Expression of ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC), a nuclear-coded mitochondrial enzyme, was programmed in HeLa cells by the use of a strategy of gene co-amplification. HeLa cells, ordinarily devoid of OTC activity, were transfected with a plasmid containing viral regulatory elements joined with two cDNA sequences, one encoding the human OTC precursor and a second encoding a mutant mouse dihydrofolate reductase. After transfection and selection in increasing concentrations of methotrexate, several hundred copies per cell of the sequence encoding OTC were detected by blot analysis. Immunoprecipitation of extracts of radiolabeled cells with anti-OTC antiserum revealed newly synthesized mature OTC subunits. Furthermore, OTC enzymatic activity in cell extracts was comparable to that of control human liver, and mitochondrial localization of OTC was demonstrated by immunofluorescence. When we incubated transfected HeLa cells with dinitrophenol, a known inhibitor of mitochondrial import, the only form of newly synthesized OTC detected was the precursor. We estimated the rate of import of precursor by performing an inhibitor-free chase; precursor was converted to mature subunit with a half-life of less than two minutes. When a HeLa transformant was incubated with the arginine analogue canavanine, the major form of newly synthesized OTC detected was a species migrating slightly more slowly than the normal precursor; little mature-sized subunit was recovered. This indicates that substitution of the analogue for arginine in the OTC precursor interferes with mitochondrial import and processing. Thus, arginine residues in the OTC precursor--most likely the four residues contained in its NH2-terminal leader sequence--probably play an important role in mitochondrial import and/or processing.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The complete amino acid sequence of mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase from rat heart has been determined by chemical methods. Peptides used in this study were purified after digestions with cyanogen bromide, trypsin, endoproteinase Lys C, and staphylococcal protease V-8. The amino acid sequence of this mature enzyme is compared with that of the precursor form, which includes the primary structure of the transit peptide. The transit peptide is required for incorporation into mitochondria and appears to be homologous to the NH2-terminal arm of a related cytoplasmic enzyme, pig heart lactate dehydrogenase. The amino acid differences between the rat heart and pig heart mitochondrial malate dehydrogenases are analyzed in terms of the three-dimensional structure of the latter. Only 12/314 differences are found; most are conservative changes, and all are on or near the surface of the enzyme. We propose that the transit peptide is located on the surface of the mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase precursor.  相似文献   

11.
In order to establish the role of the extension peptide of the precursor of P-450(SCC), a mitochondrial inner membrane protein, in the import into the organella, three deletion mutants of the precursor, in which the deletions were in the mature portion, were constructed. These mutant precursors were imported into mitochondria in vitro as efficiently as the original precursor, indicating that the extension peptide contains sufficient information for the import of the precursor into mitochondria. To investigate which portion of the extension peptide contains the mitochondrial targeting signal, various lengths of the amino-terminal portion of the extension peptide of P-450(SCC) precursor were fused to the mature portion of adrenodoxin. The fusion proteins consisting of 44 and 19 amino-terminal amino acids and mature adrenodoxin were imported into mitochondria, whereas those containing 14, 7, and 2 amino-terminal amino acid residues were not. The importance of the amino-terminal portion of the extension peptide was confirmed by the deletion from the amino-terminal end of a fusion protein consisting of the amino-terminal 44 amino acid residues of P-450(SCC) precursor and mature adrenodoxin, SCC44RAd. The amino-terminal deletions abolished the import of the fusion proteins into mitochondria. Substitution of all of the three basic amino acids, Arg(4), Arg(9), and Lys(14) in the extension peptide of SCC44RAd to Ser or Thr inhibited the binding of the fusion protein to mitochondria as well as its import.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Unlike most mitochondrial matrix proteins, the mitochondrial 3-oxoacyl-CoA thiolase [EC 2.3.1.16] is synthesized with no cleavable presequence and possesses information for mitochondrial targeting and import in the mature protein. This mitochondrial thiolase is homologous with the mature portion of peroxisomal 3-oxoacyl-CoA thiolase and acetoacetyl-CoA thiolase [EC 2.3.1.9] of Zoogloea ramigera along the entire sequence. A hybrid gene encoding the NH2-terminal 16 residues (MALLRGVFIVAAKRTP) of the mitochondrial thiolase fused to the mature portion of rat ornithine carbamoyltransferase [EC 2.1.3.3] (lacking its own presequence) was transfected into COS cells, and subcellular localization of the fusion protein was analyzed. Cell fractionation and immunocytochemical analyses showed that the fusion protein was localized in the mitochondria. These results indicate that the NH2-terminal 16 residues of the mitochondrial thiolase function as a noncleavable signal for mitochondrial targeting and import of this enzyme protein. The fusion protein containing the NH2-terminal 14 residues (MSTPSIVIASARTA) of the bacterial thiolase was also localized in the mitochondria. On the other hand, the fusion protein containing the corresponding portion (MQASASDVVVVHGQRTP) of the peroxisomal thiolase appeared not to be localized to the mitochondria. These results show that the import signal of mitochondrial 3-oxoacyl-CoA thiolase originated from the NH2-terminal portion of the ancestral thiolase. The ancestral enzyme might have already possessed a mitochondrial import activity when mitochondria appeared first, or that it might have acquired the import activity during evolution by accumulation of point mutations in the NH2-terminal portion of the enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
We show that a synthetic peptide corresponding to the N-terminal 22 residues of the cytochrome c oxidase subunit IV presequence blocked import of pre-subunit IV into yeast mitochondria. The 22-residue peptide pL4-(1-22) did not alter the electrical potential across the mitochondrial inner membrane (the delta psi). Inhibition of import was reversible and could be overcome by the addition of increased amounts of precursor. Two other peptides, pL4-(1-16) and pL4-(1-23), which correspond to, respectively, the N-terminal 16 and 23 residues of the same presequence, also blocked import of pre-subunit IV. However, pL4-(1-16) was a much weaker inhibitor of import, while the inhibitory effect of pL4-(1-23) was due to its ability to completely collapse the delta psi. pL4-(1-22) seems to be a general inhibitor of mitochondrial import, in that it also blocked uptake of several other proteins. These included the precursors of the yeast proteins cytochrome c oxidase subunit Va, the F1-ATPase beta subunit, mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase, and the ATP/ADP carrier. In addition, uptake of two non-yeast precursor proteins (human ornithine transcarbamylase and a cytochrome oxidase subunit IV-dihydrofolate reductase fusion), was also blocked by the peptide. Subsequent studies revealed that pL4-(1-22) did not block the initial recognition or binding of proteins to mitochondria. Rather, our results suggest that the peptide acts at a subsequent translocation step which is common to the import pathways of many different precursor proteins.  相似文献   

14.
Aqualysin I is a subtilisin-type serine protease which is secreted into the culture medium by Thermus aquaticus YT-1, an extremely thermophilic Gram-negative bacterium. The nucleotide sequence of the entire gene for aqualysin I was determined, and the deduced amino acid sequence suggests that aqualysin I is produced as a large precursor, consisting of at least three portions, an NH2-terminal pre-pro-sequence (127 amino acid residues), the protease (281 residues), and a COOH-terminal pro-sequence (105 residues). When the cloned gene was expressed in Escherichia coli cells, aqualysin I was not secreted. However, a precursor of aqualysin I lacking the NH2-terminal pre-pro-sequence (38-kDa protein) accumulated in the membrane fraction. On treatment of the membrane fraction at 65 degrees C, enzymatically active aqualysin I (28-kDa protein) was produced in the soluble fraction. When the active site Ser residue was replaced with Ala, cells expressing the mutant gene accumulated a 48-kDa protein in the outer membrane fraction. The 48-kDa protein lacked the NH2-terminal 14 amino acid residues of the precursor, and heat treatment did not cause any subsequent processing of this precursor. These results indicate that the NH2-terminal signal sequence is cleaved off by a signal peptidase of E. coli, and that the NH2- and COOH-terminal pro-sequences are removed through the proteolytic activity of aqualysin I itself, in that order. These findings indicate a unique four-domain structure for the aqualysin I precursor; the signal sequence, the NH2-terminal pro-sequence, mature aqualysin I, and the COOH-terminal pro-sequence, from the NH2 to the COOH terminus.  相似文献   

15.
The cytoplasmically synthesized precursor of the mitochondrial matrix enzyme, ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC), is directed to mitochondria by its amino-terminal leader peptide. To define the critical residues and/or regions in the OTC leader peptide, we have synthesized OTC precursors with alterations in the leader portion. Analysis of deletions reveals that the middle portion of the 32 residue leader peptide is absolutely required for both mitochondrial uptake and proteolytic processing, whereas NH2-terminal and penultimate COOH-terminal portions are not. Analysis of precursors with single substitutions revealed complete loss of function when arginine 23 was substituted with glycine. Additional substitutions suggested that the critical role of this arginine residue may be mediated by participation in a local secondary structure, very likely an alpha-helix, which is proposed to be an essential element in the midportion of the leader peptide.  相似文献   

16.
The amino-terminal domain of a eukaryotic signal peptide, from bovine parathyroid hormone, was altered by in vitro mutagenesis of the cDNA. The function of "internalized" signal sequence mutants and of deletion mutants was assayed using an in vitro translation-translocation system. The addition of 11 amino acids to the NH2 terminus of the signal peptide did not prevent normal processing of the precursor protein, whereas a 23-amino acid extension blocked processing. These data suggest that the NH2-terminal sequences of internal signal peptides must be permissive of the signal function. Deletion of 6 NH2-terminal amino acids from the signal peptide had no effect on its cleavage by microsomal membranes, but removal of 10 or 13 amino acids, including all charged residues prior to the hydrophobic core, prevented processing. For both the extension and deletion mutations, processed proteins were protected from proteolytic digestion, whereas unprocessed forms were not, which indicated that the unprocessed mutant proteins were not translocated across the microsomal membrane. Translation of both the extension and deletion translocation-deficient mutants was arrested by signal recognition particle, and salt-washed microsomal membranes reversed the translational arrest. These data demonstrate that the NH2-terminal domain is not required for the interaction of signal recognition particle with the signal peptide or with signal recognition particle receptor, but is required for formation of a maximally translocation-competent complex with the microsomal membrane.  相似文献   

17.
We have isolated a cDNA clone encoding the precursor of the beta-subunit of the bovine heart mitochondrial F1-ATPase. Two probes were used to isolate this precursor from a bovine heart cDNA library. One probe was a mixed-sequence oligonucleotide directed against a portion of the amino acid sequence of the mature protein, and the other probe was the F1-ATPase beta-subunit gene from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Determination of the nucleotide sequence of this cDNA reveals that it contains a 1584-nucleotide-long open reading frame that encodes the complete mature beta-subunit protein and a 48 amino acid long NH2-terminal extension. This amino-terminal presequence contains four basic arginine residues, one acidic glutamic acid residue, four polar uncharged serine residues, and five proline residues. Southern blot hybridization analyses suggest that the bovine F1-ATPase beta-subunit precursor is encoded by a single genetic locus. RNA blot hybridization analyses reveal a single mRNA species of approximately 1.9 kilobases from both bovine liver and heart.  相似文献   

18.
We have characterized further the biogenesis in vitro of ornithine transcarbamylase, a homotrimeric mitochondrial matrix enzyme synthesized in the cytoplasm as a larger precursor. When cell-free translation mixtures containing the ornithine transcarbamylase precursor (40 kDa) were chromatographed on Bio-Gel P-200 columns, all of the precursor eluted as aggregates or complexes with molecular weights greater than 200 kDa. None of the precursor bound to a ligand affinity column containing delta-N-(phosphonoacetyl)-L-ornithine (delta-PALO), a transition-state analog and competitive inhibitor of carbamyl phosphate binding, which recognizes native ornithine transcarbamylase. In contrast, a significant portion of the labeled mature-sized subunits, formed when intact mitochondria processed the precursor, bound specifically to the delta-PALO column, were eluted by carbamyl phosphate, and chromatographed on a Bio-Gel P-300 column with a mobility identical to that of native, trimeric ornithine transcarbamylase. No such binding to delta-PALO was observed for the mature-sized monomer or dimer, or for the intermediate-sized ornithine transcarbamylase polypeptide. Moreover, processing by a mitochondrial matrix fraction failed to yield trimeric enzyme, despite producing ample amounts of mature-sized monomer. We conclude that delta-PALO recognizes only trimeric ornithine transcarbamylase composed of mature-sized subunits and that such trimers can be assembled in vitro by intact mitochondria following translocation and proteolytic processing.  相似文献   

19.
The uptake of the cytoplasmically synthesized mammalian enzyme, ornithine transcarbamylase, into mitochondria is directed by an N-terminal peptide of 32 amino acids. We have investigated some of the structural requirements for the import of the enzyme from rat liver into isolated mitochondria and into mitochondria of COS cells transfected with cDNA encoding the precursor form of ornithine transcarbamylase. Deletion of 21 amino acids from the N terminus of the leader peptide blocked the import of the precursor; deletion of 5 amino acids at positions 15-19 from the N terminus of the leader peptide had no deleterious effect on the import of the enzyme, nor on the processing and assembly of subunits in mitochondria. The region deleted contained three of eight basic residues in the leader peptide suggesting that specific structural elements containing basic residues, rather than the general basic nature of the leader, may be involved in mitochondrial import.  相似文献   

20.
A precursor (pS) to the small subunit (S) of ribulose1-,5-bisphosphate carboxylase is the major product of cell-free protein synthesis directed by poly(A) containing RNA from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. We present sequence data for in vitro-synthesized pS, for in vitro- synthesized S that in generated from pS by posttranslational incubation with a Chlamydomonas cell extract, and for in vitro-synthesized, mature S. We show that pS contains an NH2-terminal extension of 44 amino acid residues that is removed by cleavage at the correct site when pS is converted to S by an endoprotease present in the Chlamydomonas cell extract.  相似文献   

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