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1.
Members of the Oxa1/YidC family are involved in the biogenesis of membrane proteins. In bacteria, YidC catalyzes the insertion and assembly of proteins of the inner membrane. Mitochondria of animals, fungi, and plants harbor two distant homologues of YidC, Oxa1 and Cox18/Oxa2. Oxa1 plays a pivotal role in the integration of mitochondrial translation products into the inner membrane of mitochondria. It contains a C-terminal ribosome-binding domain that physically interacts with mitochondrial ribosomes to facilitate the co-translational insertion of nascent membrane proteins. The molecular function of Cox18/Oxa2 is not well understood. Employing a functional complementation approach with mitochondria-targeted versions of YidC we show that YidC is able to functionally replace both Oxa1 and Cox18/Oxa2. However, to integrate mitochondrial translation products into the inner membrane of mitochondria, the ribosome-binding domain of Oxa1 has to be appended onto YidC. On the contrary, the fusion of the ribosome-binding domain onto YidC prevents its ability to complement COX18 mutants suggesting an indispensable post-translational activity of Cox18/Oxa2. Our observations suggest that during evolution of mitochondria from their bacterial ancestors the two descendents of YidC functionally segregated to perform two distinct activities, one co-translational and one post-translational.  相似文献   

2.
The biogenesis of mitochondria requires the insertion of both nuclear and mitochondrially encoded proteins into the inner membrane. The inner membrane protein Oxa1 plays an important role in this process. Translocation of the terminal intermembrane space domains of subunit 2 of the cytochrome oxidase complex, Cox2, strictly depends on Oxa1. In contrast, other Oxa1 substrates can be inserted independently of Oxa1 function, although at reduced efficiency. A Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutant containing a large deletion in its mitochondrial genome allowed us to analyze the insertion process of a fusion protein of cytochrome b and Cox2. In this mutant, the N-terminal domain of Cox2 is synthesized as a hairpin loop that is flanked by hydrophobic transmembrane segments on both sides. Both genetic and biochemical evidences indicate that translocation of this region across the inner membrane still requires Oxa1 function. Thus, the position of intermembrane space domains within protein sequences does not appear to determine their dependence on the Oxa1 translocase. Our observations rather suggest that the dependence on Oxa1 correlates with the net charge of the domain that has to be translocated across the lipid bilayer.  相似文献   

3.
The membrane assembly of the respiratory complexes requires the membrane insertases Oxa1 in mitochondria and YidC in bacteria. Oxa1 is responsible for the insertion of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit II (CoxII). Here, we investigated whether YidC, the bacterial Oxa1 homolog, plays a crucial role in the assembly of the bacterial subunit II (CyoA) of cytochrome bo oxidase. CyoA spans the membrane twice and is made with a cleavable signal peptide. We find that translocation of the short N-terminal domain of CyoA is YidC-dependent. In contrast, both the SecA/SecYEG complex and YidC are required for translocation of the large C-terminal domain. By studying the N-terminal domain of CyoA alone, we find that translocation is unaffected when SecE is depleted, suggesting that the YidC insertase on its own catalyzes membrane insertion of the N-terminal region of CyoA. Strikingly, we find that the translocation of the N-terminal domain is a prerequisite for translocation of the C-terminal domain in the full-length CyoA protein because translocation of the large C-terminal domain alone in a truncated CyoA derivative was observed in the absence of YidC. This work shows that the distinct domains of CyoA have different translocation requirements (YidC only and Sec/YidC) and confirms that the membrane biogenesis of subunit II of cytochrome oxidase in bacteria and mitochondria have conserved features.  相似文献   

4.
The yeast Oxa1 protein is involved in the biogenesis of the mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) machinery. The involvement of Oxa1 in the assembly of the cytochrome oxidase (COX) complex, where it facilitates the cotranslational membrane insertion of mitochondrially encoded COX subunits, is well documented. In this study we have addressed the role of Oxa1, and its sequence-related protein Cox18/Oxa2, in the biogenesis of the F(1)F(o)-ATP synthase complex. We demonstrate that Oxa1, but not Cox18/Oxa2, directly supports the assembly of the membrane embedded F(o)-sector of the ATP synthase. Oxa1 was found to physically interact with newly synthesized mitochondrially encoded Atp9 protein in a posttranslational manner and in a manner that is not dependent on the C-terminal, matrix-localized region of Oxa1. The stable manner of the Atp9-Oxa1 interaction is in contrast to the cotranslational and transient interaction previously observed for the mitochondrially encoded COX subunits with Oxa1. In the absence of Oxa1, Atp9 was observed to assemble into an oligomeric complex containing F(1)-subunits, but its further assembly with subunit 6 (Atp6) of the F(o)-sector was perturbed. We propose that by directly interacting with newly synthesized Atp9 in a posttranslational manner, Oxa1 is required to maintain the assembly competence of the Atp9-F(1)-subcomplex for its association with Atp6.  相似文献   

5.
Hell K  Neupert W  Stuart RA 《The EMBO journal》2001,20(6):1281-1288
Oxa1p is a member of the conserved Oxa1/YidC/Alb3 protein family involved in the membrane insertion of proteins. Oxa1p has been shown previously to directly facilitate the export of the N-terminal domains of membrane proteins across the inner membrane to the intermembrane space of mitochondria. Here we report on a general role of Oxa1p in the membrane insertion of proteins. (i) The function of Oxa1p is not limited to the insertion of membrane proteins that undergo N-terminal tail export; rather, it also extends to the insertion of other polytopic proteins such as the mitochondrially encoded Cox1p and Cox3p proteins. These are proteins whose N-termini are retained in the mitochondrial matrix. (ii) Oxa1p interacts directly with these substrates prior to completion of their synthesis. (iii) The interaction of Oxa1p with its substrates is particularly strong when nascent polypeptide chains are inserted into the inner membrane, suggesting a direct function of Oxa1p in co-translational insertion from the matrix. Taken together, we conclude that the Oxa1 complex represents a general membrane protein insertion machinery in the inner membrane of mitochondria.  相似文献   

6.
Members of the YidC/Oxa1/Alb3 protein family function in the biogenesis of membrane proteins in bacteria, mitochondria and chloroplasts. In Escherichia coli, YidC plays a key role in the integration and assembly of many inner membrane proteins. Interestingly, YidC functions both in concert with the Sec-translocon and as a separate insertase independent of the translocon. Mitochondria of higher eukaryotes contain two distant homologues of YidC: Oxa1 and Cox18/Oxa2. Oxa1 is required for the insertion of membrane proteins into the mitochondrial inner membrane. Cox18/Oxa2 plays a poorly defined role in the biogenesis of the cytochrome c oxidase complex. Employing a genetic complementation approach by expressing the conserved region of yeast Cox18 in E. coli, we show here that Cox18 is able to complement the essential Sec-independent function of YidC. This identifies Cox18 as a bona fide member of the YidC/Oxa1/Alb3 family.  相似文献   

7.
The N-terminal and C-terminal domains of mitochondrially synthesized cytochrome c oxidase subunit II, Cox2, are translocated through the inner membrane to the intermembrane space (IMS). We investigated the distinct mechanisms of N-tail and C-tail export by analysis of epitope-tagged Cox2 variants encoded in Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondrial DNA. Both the N and C termini of a truncated protein lacking the Cox2 C-terminal domain were translocated to the IMS via a pathway dependent upon the conserved translocase Oxa1. The topology of this Cox2 variant, accumulated at steady state, was largely but not completely unaffected in mutants lacking proteins required for export of the C-tail domain, Cox18 and Mss2. C-tail export was blocked by truncation of the last 40 residues from the C-tail domain, indicating that sequence and/or structural features of this domain are required for its translocation. Mss2, a peripheral protein bound to the inner surface of the inner membrane, coimmunoprecipitated with full-length newly synthesized Cox2, whose leader peptide had already been cleaved in the IMS. Our data suggest that the C-tail domain is recognized posttranslationally by a specialized translocation apparatus after the N-tail has been translocated by Oxa1.  相似文献   

8.
The inner membrane of mitochondria is especially protein-rich. To direct proteins into the inner membrane, translocases mediate transport and membrane insertion of precursor proteins. Although the majority of mitochondrial proteins are imported from the cytoplasm, core subunits of respiratory chain complexes are inserted into the inner membrane from the matrix. Oxa1, a conserved membrane protein, mediates the insertion of mitochondrion-encoded precursors into the inner mitochondrial membrane. The molecular mechanism by which Oxa1 mediates insertion of membrane spans, entailing the translocation of hydrophilic domains across the inner membrane, is still unknown. We investigated if Oxa1 could act as a protein-conducting channel for precursor transport. Using a biophysical approach, we show that Oxa1 can form a pore capable of accommodating a translocating protein segment. After purification and reconstitution, Oxa1 acts as a cation-selective channel that specifically responds to mitochondrial export signals. The aqueous pore formed by Oxa1 displays highly dynamic characteristics with a restriction zone diameter between 0.6 and 2 nm, which would suffice for polypeptide translocation across the membrane. Single channel analyses revealed four discrete channels per active unit, suggesting that the Oxa1 complex forms several cooperative hydrophilic pores in the inner membrane. Hence, Oxa1 behaves as a pore-forming translocase that is regulated in a membrane potential and substrate-dependent manner.  相似文献   

9.
Oxa1 is the mitochondrial representative of a family of related proteins that mediate the insertion of substrate proteins into the membranes of bacteria, chloroplasts, and mitochondria. Several studies have demonstrated that the bacterial homologue YidC participates both in the direct uptake of proteins from the bacterial cytosol, and in the uptake of nascent proteins from the Sec translocase. Studies on the biogenesis of membrane proteins in mitochondria established that Oxa1 has the capability to receive substrates at the inner surface of the inner membrane. In this study, we asked if Oxa1 may similarly cooperate with a protein translocase within the membrane. Since Oxa1 is involved in its own biogenesis, we used the precursor of Oxa1 as a model protein and investigated its import pathway. We found that immediately after import into mitochondria, Oxa1 initially accumulates at Tim23 that forms the inner membrane protein translocase. Cleavage of the Oxa1 presequence is dependent on mtHsp70, a heat shock protein of the mitochondrial matrix. However, mutant mtHsp70 showing a defect in the release of bound substrate proteins does not interfere with subsequent membrane insertion, indicating that membrane insertion of the mature protein is essentially mtHsp70-independent. We conclude that Oxa1 has the ability to accept preproteins within the membrane.  相似文献   

10.
Herrmann JM  Neupert W 《IUBMB life》2003,55(4-5):219-225
The inner membrane of mitochondria harbours a large number of polypeptides, many of which have evolved from proteins of the prokaryotic progenitors of mitochondria. The sorting routes on which these proteins are integrated into the mitochondrial inner membrane reflect their phylogenetic origin: Proteins of eukaryotic descent typically reach their destination following arrest of import at the level of the inner membrane. In contrast, many proteins inherited from the prokaryotic progenitor cell are inserted into the inner membrane in an export step following translocation into the matrix. Recently, three different insertion pathways from the matrix into the inner membrane were identified which show considerable parallels to the protein insertion processes in bacteria and chloroplasts. Two of these pathways depend on the related inner membrane proteins Oxa1 and Cox18. A third route is less well defined and depends on the membrane-associated matrix protein Mba1.  相似文献   

11.
To study in vivo the export of mitochondrially synthesized protein from the matrix to the intermembrane space, we have fused a synthetic mitochondrial gene, ARG8m, to the Saccharomyces cerevisiae COX2 gene in mitochondrial DNA. The Arg8mp moiety was translocated through the inner membrane when fused to the Cox2p C terminus by a mechanism dependent on topogenic information at least partially contained within the exported Cox2p C-terminal tail. The pre-Cox2p leader peptide did not signal translocation. Export of the Cox2p C-terminal tail, but not the N-terminal tail, was dependent on the inner membrane potential. The mitochondrial export system does not closely resemble the bacterial Sec translocase. However, normal translocation of both exported domains of Cox2p was defective in cells lacking the widely conserved inner membrane protein Oxa1p.  相似文献   

12.
Two multisubunit protein complexes for membrane protein insertion were recently identified in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER): the guided entry of tail anchor proteins (GET) complex and ER membrane complex (EMC). The structures of both of their hydrophobic core subunits, which are required for the insertion reaction, revealed an overall similarity to the YidC/Oxa1/Alb3 family members found in bacteria, mitochondria, and chloroplasts. This suggests that these membrane insertion machineries all share a common ancestry. To test whether these ER proteins can functionally replace Oxa1 in yeast mitochondria, we generated strains that express mitochondria-targeted Get2–Get1 and Emc6–Emc3 fusion proteins in Oxa1 deletion mutants. Interestingly, the Emc6–Emc3 fusion was able to complement an Δoxa1 mutant and restored its respiratory competence. The Emc6–Emc3 fusion promoted the insertion of the mitochondrially encoded protein Cox2, as well as of nuclear encoded inner membrane proteins, although was not able to facilitate the assembly of the Atp9 ring. Our observations indicate that protein insertion into the ER is functionally conserved to the insertion mechanism in bacteria and mitochondria and adheres to similar topological principles.

Redirecting the core subunits of the protein membrane insertion complex EMC into mitochondria rescues cells deficient for the mitochondrial Oxa1 system; this supports the hypothesis that the machinery for protein insertion into the ER membrane is functionally analogous to the YidC/Oxa1/Alb3 family of bacteria, mitochondria and chloroplasts.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
The nuclear gene OXA1 encodes a protein located within the mitochondrial inner membrane that is required for the biogenesis of both cytochrome c oxidase (Cox) and ATPase. In the absence of Oxa1p, the translocation of the mitochondrially encoded subunit Cox2p to the intermembrane space (also referred to as export) is prevented, and it has been proposed that Oxa1p could be a component of a general mitochondrial export machinery. We have examined the role of Oxa1p in light of its relationships with two mitochondrial proteases, the matrix protease Afg3p-Rca1p and the intermembrane space protease Yme1p, by analyzing the assembly and activity of the Cox and ATPase complexes in Deltaoxa1, Deltaoxa1Deltaafg3, and Deltaoxa1Deltayme1 mutants. We show that membrane subunits of both complexes are specifically degraded in the absence of Oxa1p. Neither Afg3p nor Yme1p is responsible for the degradation of Cox subunits. However, the F(0) subunits Atp4p, Atp6p, and Atp17p are stabilized in the Deltaoxa1Deltayme1 double mutant, and oligomycin-sensitive ATPase activity is restored, showing that the increased stability of the ATPase subunits allows significant translocation and assembly to occur even in the absence of Oxa1p. These results suggest that Oxa1p is not essential for the export of ATPase subunits. In addition, although respiratory function is dispensable in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we show that the simultaneous inactivation of AFG3 and YME1 is lethal and that the essential function does not reside in their protease activity.  相似文献   

15.
The biogenesis of mitochondria requires the integration of many proteins into the inner membrane from the matrix side. The inner membrane protein Oxa1 plays an important role in this process. We identified Mba1 as a second mitochondrial component that is required for efficient protein insertion. Like Oxa1, Mba1 specifically interacts both with mitochondrial translation products and with conservatively sorted, nuclear-encoded proteins during their integration into the inner membrane. Oxa1 and Mba1 overlap in function and substrate specificity, but both can act independently of each other. We conclude that Mba1 is part of the mitochondrial protein export machinery and represents the first component of a novel Oxa1-independent insertion pathway into the mitochondrial inner membrane.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Members of the YidC/Oxa1/Alb3 protein family facilitate the insertion, folding and assembly of proteins of the inner membranes of bacteria and mitochondria and the thylakoid membrane of plastids. All homologs share a conserved hydrophobic core region comprising five transmembrane domains. On the basis of phylogenetic analyses, six subgroups of the family can be distinguished which presumably arose from three independent gene duplications followed by functional specialization. During evolution of bacteria, mitochondria and chloroplasts, subgroup-specific regions were added to the core domain to facilitate the association with ribosomes or other components contributing to the substrate spectrum of YidC/Oxa1/Alb3 proteins.  相似文献   

18.

Background

Bacteria and mitochondria contain translocases that function to transport proteins across or insert proteins into their inner and outer membranes. Extant mitochondria retain some bacterial-derived translocases but have lost others. While BamA and YidC were integrated into general mitochondrial protein transport pathways (as Sam50 and Oxa1), the inner membrane TAT translocase, which uniquely transports folded proteins across the membrane, was retained sporadically across the eukaryote tree.

Results

We have identified mitochondrial TAT machinery in diverse eukaryotic lineages and define three different types of eukaryote-encoded TatABC-derived machineries (TatAC, TatBC and TatC-only). Here, we investigate TatAC and TatC-only machineries, which have not been studied previously. We show that mitochondria-encoded TatAC of the jakobid Andalucia godoyi represent the minimal functional pathway capable of substituting for the Escherichia coli TatABC complex and can transport at least one substrate. However, selected TatC-only machineries, from multiple eukaryotic lineages, were not capable of supporting the translocation of this substrate across the bacterial membrane. Despite the multiple losses of the TatC gene from the mitochondrial genome, the gene was never transferred to the cell nucleus. Although the major constraint preventing nuclear transfer of mitochondrial TatC is likely its high hydrophobicity, we show that in chloroplasts, such transfer of TatC was made possible due to modifications of the first transmembrane domain.

Conclusions

At its origin, mitochondria inherited three inner membrane translocases Sec, TAT and Oxa1 (YidC) from its bacterial ancestor. Our work shows for the first time that mitochondrial TAT has likely retained its unique function of transporting folded proteins at least in those few eukaryotes with TatA and TatC subunits encoded in the mitochondrial genome. However, mitochondria, in contrast to chloroplasts, abandoned the machinery multiple times in evolution. The overall lower hydrophobicity of the Oxa1 protein was likely the main reason why this translocase was nearly universally retained in mitochondrial biogenesis pathways.
  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Proteins of the Oxa1/YidC/Alb3 family mediate the insertion of proteins into membranes of mitochondria, bacteria, and chloroplasts. Here we report the identification of a second gene of the Oxa1/YidC/Alb3 family in the genome of Neurospora crassa, which we have named oxa2. Its gene product, Oxa2, is located in the inner membrane of mitochondria. Deletion of the oxa2 gene caused a specific defect in the biogenesis of cytochrome oxidase and resulted in induction of the alternative oxidase (AOD), which bypasses the need for complex IV of the respiratory chain. The Oxa2 protein of N. crassa complements Cox18-deficient yeast mutants suggesting a common function for both proteins. The oxa2 sequence allowed the identification of a new subfamily of Oxa1/YidC/Alb3 proteins whose members appear to be ubiquitously present in mitochondria of fungi, plants, and animals including humans.  相似文献   

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