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1.
The glycosomes of trypanosomes are related to eukaryoticperoxisomes. For many glycosomal and peroxisomal proteins, a C-terminal SKL-like tripeptide known as PTS-1 serves as the targeting signal. For peroxisomes, a second N-terminal signal (PTS-2) was demonstrated on rat 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase. Several glycosomal proteins do not bear a PTS-1. One such protein, fructose bisphosphate aldolase, has a PTS-2 homology at its N-terminus. To find out whether the PTS-2 pathway exists in trypanosomes, we expressed chloramphenicol acetyltransferase fusion proteins bearing N-terminal segments of either rat thiolase or trypanosome aldolase. The mammalian PTS-2 clearly mediated glycosomal import. The aldolase N-terminus mediated import with variable efficiency depending on the length of the appended sequence. These results provide evidence for the existence of the PTS-2 pathway in trypanosomes.  相似文献   

2.
The human pathogens of the Leishmania and Trypanosoma genera compartmentalize glycolytic and other key metabolic pathways in unique subcellular microbodies called glycosomes, organelles related to the peroxisomes of mammals and yeast. The molecular machinery that carries out the specific targeting of glycosomal proteins to the organelle has not been characterized, although the bulk of glycosomal proteins contain the COOH-terminal tripeptide glycosomal peroxisomal targeting signal-1 (PTS-1) similar to the mammalian and fungal peroxisomal targeting signal. To characterize the mechanisms of glycosomal targeting, the gene encoding PEX5, designated LdPEX5, has been isolated from Leishmania donovani. LdPEX5 encodes a 625-amino acid protein with a molecular mass of 69.7 kDa. Like its homologs in yeast and humans, LdPEX5 predicts a protein with seven copies of a tetratricopeptide repeat in its COOH-terminal half proposed to mediate PTS-1 binding and three copies of a WXXX(Y/F) motif in its NH(2) terminus conjectured to be essential for protein translocation into the organelle. LdPEX5 was overexpressed in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity for binding experiments and generation of antibodies. Recombinant LdPEX5 bound xanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (XPRT), a PTS-1 containing glycosomal protein with a K(D) of 4.2 nm, but did not bind an XPRT in which the PTS-1 had been deleted. Moreover, binding studies with the COOH-terminal half of the LdPEX5 confirmed that this portion of the PEX5 protein was capable of binding the XPRT PTS-1 with an affinity of 17.3 nm. Confocal microsocopy revealed that LdPEX5 was predominantly in the cytosolic milieu, and genetic analysis implied that LdPEX5 was an essential gene.  相似文献   

3.
Protozoan Kinetoplastida such as the pathogenic trypanosomes compartmentalize several important metabolic systems, including the glycolytic pathway, in peroxisome-like organelles designated glycosomes. Genes for three proteins involved in glycosome biogenesis of Trypanosoma brucei were identified. A preliminary analysis of these proteins, the peroxins PEX6, PEX10 and PEX12, was performed. Cellular depletion of these peroxins by RNA interference affected growth of both mammalian bloodstream-form and insect-form (procyclic) trypanosomes. The bloodstream forms, which rely entirely on glycolysis for their ATP supply, were more rapidly killed. Both by immunofluorescence studies of intact procyclic T. brucei cells and subcellular fractionation experiments involving differential permeabilization of plasma and organellar membranes it was shown that RNAi-dependent knockdown of the expression of each of these peroxins resulted in the partial mis-localization of different types of glycosomal matrix enzymes to the cytoplasm: proteins with consensus motifs such as the C-terminal type 1 peroxisomal targeting signal PTS1 or the N-terminal signal PTS2 and a protein for which the sorting information is present in a polypeptide-internal fragment not containing an identifiable consensus sequence.  相似文献   

4.
In African trypanosomes most enzymes of the glycolytic pathway are found in a microbody-like organelle, called the glycosome. The analysis of their structural and functional properties has shown that these glycosomal enzymes possess some specific features which are absent from the cytosolic proteins of trypanosomes and from the glycolytic enzymes of other organisms, where glycolysis is not compartmentalized within an organelle. The specific properties of the glycosomal enzymes may be responsible for the routing of the proteins from their site of synthesis, the cytosol, into the glycosome, or they may be involved in the proper functioning of the enzymes within the organelle. Whatever the role of the unique features, they are potential targets for compounds that could specifically interfere with glycolysis in trypanosomes. Therefore, a detailed study of the glycolytic enzymes of trypanosomes may lead to the development of therapeutically useful drugs against these harmful parasites.  相似文献   

5.
Trypanosoma brucei and related organisms contain an organelle evolutionarily related to peroxisomes that sequesters glycolysis, among other pathways. We have shown previously that disruption of protein import into this organelle, the glycosome, can be accomplished through RNA interference (RNAi)-mediated knockdown of the peroxin PEX14. Decreased PEX14 in turn leads to cell death, which, at least in the procyclic stage, can be triggered by the presence of glucose. Here we show that fructose, which is taken up and metabolized by procyclic form T. brucei, and glycerol, which interfaces with the glycosomal glycolytic pathway, are also toxic during PEX14 RNAi. Earlier computer modeling studies predicted that glycolysis would be toxic to T. brucei in the absence of glycosomal compartmentation because of the intrinsic lack of feedback regulation of the parasite hexokinase and phosphofructokinase. To further test this hypothesis, we performed double RNAi, targeting hexokinase and PEX14. Knockdown of hexokinase rescued PEX14 knockdown cells from glucose toxicity, even though glycosomal proteins continue to be mislocalized to the cytosol. Knockdown of phosphofructokinase was benign in the absence of glucose but toxic in the presence of glucose. When PEX14 and phosphofructokinase mRNAs were jointly targeted for RNAi, glycerol remained toxic to the parasites. Taken together, these data indicate that the glycosome provides significant, but not complete, protection of trypanosomes from the dangerous design of glycolysis.  相似文献   

6.
Metabolism in trypanosomatids is compartmentalised with major pathways, notably glycolysis, present in peroxisome-like organelles called glycosomes. To date, little information is available about the transport of metabolites through the glycosomal membrane. Previously, three ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters, called GAT1-3 for Glycosomal ABC Transporters 1 to 3, have been identified in the glycosomal membrane of Trypanosoma brucei. Here we report that GAT1 and GAT3 are expressed both in bloodstream and procyclic form trypanosomes, whereas GAT2 is mainly or exclusively expressed in bloodstream-form cells. Protease protection experiments showed that the nucleotide-binding domain of GAT1 and GAT3 is exposed to the cytosol, indicating that these transporters mediate the ATP-dependent uptake of solutes from the cytosol into the glycosomal lumen. Depletion of GAT1 and GAT3 by RNA interference in procyclic cells grown in glucose-containing medium did not affect growth. Surprisingly, GAT1 depletion enhanced the expression of the very different GAT3 protein. Expression knockdown of GAT1, but not GAT3, in procyclic cells cultured in glucose-free medium was lethal. Depletion of GAT1 in glucose-grown procyclic cells caused a modification of the total cellular fatty-acid composition. No or only minor changes were observed in the levels of most fatty acids, including oleate (C18:1), nevertheless the linoleate (C18:2) abundance was significantly increased upon GAT1 silencing. Furthermore, glycosomes purified from procyclic wild-type cells incorporate oleoyl-CoA in a concentration- and ATP-dependent manner, whilst this incorporation was severely reduced in glycosomes from cells in which GAT1 levels had been decreased. Together, these results strongly suggest that GAT1 serves to transport primarily oleoyl-CoA, but possibly also other fatty acids, from the cytosol into the glycosomal lumen and that its depletion results in a cellular linoleate accumulation, probably due to the presence of an active oleate desaturase. The role of intraglycosomal oleoyl-CoA and its essentiality when the trypanosomes are grown in the absence of glucose, are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
1. The production of pyruvate, glycerol and glycerol-3-phosphate by intact and digitonin-permeabilized Trypanosoma brucei brucei has been studied with glucose or the glycolytic intermediates as substrates. 2. Under aerobic conditions hexosephosphates gave maximal glycolysis in the presence of 40-60 micrograms digitonin/10(8) trypanosomes while the triosephosphates gave it at 20-30 micrograms digitonin/10(8) trypanosomes. 3. In the presence of salicylhydroxamic acid, and the glycolytic intermediates, permeabilized trypanosomes produced equimolar amounts of pyruvate and glycerol-3-phosphate and no glycerol. Under the same conditions, glucose catabolism produced glycerol in addition to pyruvated and glycerol-3-phosphate. 4. In the presence of salicylhydroxamic acid and ATP or ADP intact trypanosomes produced equimolar amounts of pyruvate and (glycerol plus glycerol-3-phosphate) with glucose as substrate. 5. A carrier for ATP and ADP at the glycosomal membrane is implicated. 6. It is apparent that glycerol formation is regulated by the ATP/ADP ratio and that it needs intact glycosomal membrane and the presence of glucose.  相似文献   

8.
Alanine/glyoxylate aminotransferase 1 (AGT) is peroxisomal in most normal humans, but in some patients with the hereditary disease primary hyperoxaluria type 1 (PH1), AGT is mislocalized to the mitochondria. In an attempt to identify the sequences in AGT that mediate its targeting to peroxisomes, and to determine the mechanism by which AGT is mistargeted in PH1, we have studied the intracellular compartmentalization of various normal and mutant AGT polypeptides in normal human fibroblasts and cell lines with selective deficiencies of peroxisomal protein import, using immunofluorescence microscopy after intranuclear microinjection of AGT expression plasmids. The results show that AGT is imported into peroxisomes via the peroxisomal targeting sequence type 1 (PTS1) translocation pathway. Although the COOH-terminal KKL of human AGT was shown to be necessary for its peroxisomal import, this tripeptide was unable to direct the peroxisomal import of the bona fide peroxisomal protein firefly luciferase or the reporter protein bacterial chloramphenicol acetyltransferase. An ill-defined region immediately upstream of the COOH-terminal KKL was also found to be necessary for the peroxisomal import of AGT, but again this region was found to be insufficient to direct the peroxisomal import of chloramphenicol acetyltransferase. Substitution of the COOH-terminal KKL of human AGT by the COOH-terminal tripeptides found in the AGTs of other mammalian species (SQL, NKL), the prototypical PTS1 (SKL), or the glycosomal PTS1 (SSL) also allowed peroxisomal targeting, showing that the allowable PTS1 motif in AGT is considerably more degenerate than, or at least very different from, that acceptable in luciferase. AGT possessing the two amino acid substitutions responsible for its mistargeting in PH1 (i.e., Pro11-- >Leu and Gly170-->Arg) was targeted mainly to the mitochondria. However, AGTs possessing each amino acid substitution on its own were targeted normally to the peroxisomes. This suggests that Gly170-->Arg- mediated increased functional efficiency of the otherwise weak mitochondrial targeting sequence (generated by the Pro11-->Leu polymorphism) is not due to interference with the peroxisomal targeting or import of AGT.  相似文献   

9.
It has been shown previously in various organisms that the peroxin PEX14 is a component of a docking complex at the peroxisomal membrane, where it is involved in the import of matrix proteins into the organelle after their synthesis in the cytosol and recognition by a receptor. Here we present a characterization of the Trypanosoma brucei homologue of PEX14. It is shown that the protein is associated with glycosomes, the peroxisome-like organelles of trypanosomatids in which most glycolytic enzymes are compartmentalized. The N-terminal part of the protein binds specifically to TbPEX5, the cytosolic receptor for glycosomal matrix proteins with a peroxisome-targeting signal type 1 (PTS-1). TbPEX14 mRNA depletion by RNA interference results, in both bloodstream-form and procyclic, insect-stage T. brucei, in mislocalization of glycosomal proteins to the cytosol. The mislocalization was observed for different classes of matrix proteins: proteins with a C-terminal PTS-1, a N-terminal PTS-2 and a polypeptide internal I-PTS. The RNA interference experiments also showed that TbPEX14 is essential for the survival of bloodstream-form and procyclic trypanosomes. These data indicate the protein's great potential as a target for selective trypanocidal drugs.  相似文献   

10.
Glycosomes are specialized organelles of trypanosomes which contain glycolytic enzymes as their major protein components in Trypanosoma brucei bloodstream form. In the glycosomes of the insect form of T. brucei, additional enzyme activities are found but have not yet been ascribed to a particular protein molecule. In this study, we report the characterization of a 60-kDa glycosomal protein (p60) encoded by a single copy gene which is transcribed into a mRNA of 2.9 kilobases. The gene codes for a protein of 472 amino acids with a molecular mass of 52.5 kDa, suggesting that the mRNA contains large untranslated regions of about 1.4 kilobases. Genomic DNA hybridizations have shown that the gene for p60 is confined to the family of Trypanosomatidae. Sequence comparison confirmed that p60 is not a member of a conserved protein family and does not belong to the group of glycolytic enzymes. p60 is expressed much more strongly in insect form than in bloodstream form trypanosomes. Thus, p60 is the first glycosomal protein observed whose expression is up-regulated during the transition of trypanosomes from the bloodstream to the insect form. The biochemical characterization of p60 demonstrated its capability to bind microtubules and membrane vesicles and to cross-link these structures. These properties might indicate a function in linking glycosomes to the microtubules of the trypanosomal cytoskeleton. However, proteinase K digestion experiments indicate that p60 is not exposed at the outer surface of the glycosomal membrane. The biological role of the microtubule-binding capability of p60 remains unclear, whereas its membrane binding may be of physiological significance inside the glycosome.  相似文献   

11.
Trypanosomes contain unique peroxisome-like organelles designated glycosomes which sequester enzymes involved in a variety of metabolic processes including glycolysis. We identified three ABC transporters associated with the glycosomal membrane of Trypanosoma brucei. They were designated GAT1-3 for Glycosomal ABC Transporters. These polypeptides are so-called half-ABC transporters containing only one transmembrane domain and a single nucleotide-binding domain, like their homologues of mammalian and yeast peroxisomes. The glycosomal localization was shown by immunofluorescence microscopy of trypanosomes expressing fusion constructs of the transporters with Green Fluorescent Protein. By expression of fluorescent deletion constructs, the glycosome-targeting determinant of two transporters was mapped to different fragments of their respective primary structures. Interestingly, these fragments share a short sequence motif and contain adjacent to it one--but not the same--of the predicted six transmembrane segments of the transmembrane domain. We also identified the T. brucei homologue of peroxin PEX19, which is considered to act as a chaperonin and/or receptor for cytosolically synthesized proteins destined for insertion into the peroxisomal membrane. By using a bacterial two-hybrid system, it was shown that glycosomal ABC transporter fragments containing an organelle-targeting determinant can interact with both the trypanosomatid and human PEX19, despite their low overall sequence identity. Mutated forms of human PEX19 that lost interaction with human peroxisomal membrane proteins also did not bind anymore to the T. brucei glycosomal transporter. Moreover, fragments of the glycosomal transporter were targeted to the peroxisomal membrane when expressed in mammalian cells. Together these results indicate evolutionary conservation of the glycosomal/peroxisomal membrane protein import mechanism.  相似文献   

12.
Trypanosoma brucei belongs to a group of protists that sequester the first six or seven glycolytic steps inside specialized peroxisomes, named glycosomes. Because of the glycosomal membrane impermeability to nucleotides, ATP molecules consumed by the first glycolytic steps need to be regenerated in the glycosomes by kinases, such as phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK). The glycosomal pyruvate phosphate dikinase (PPDK), which reversibly converts phosphoenolpyruvate into pyruvate, could also be involved in this process. To address this question, we analyzed the metabolism of the main carbon sources used by the procyclic trypanosomes (glucose, proline, and threonine) after deletion of the PPDK gene in the wild-type (Δppdk) and PEPCK null (Δppdkpepck) backgrounds. The rate of acetate production from glucose is 30% reduced in the Δppdk mutant, whereas threonine-derived acetate production is not affected, showing that PPDK function in the glycolytic direction with production of ATP in the glycosomes. The Δppdkpepck mutant incubated in glucose as the only carbon source showed a 3.8-fold reduction of the glycolytic rate compared with the Δpepck mutant, as a consequence of the imbalanced glycosomal ATP/ADP ratio. The role of PPDK in maintenance of the ATP/ADP balance was confirmed by expressing the glycosomal phosphoglycerate kinase (PGKC) in the Δppdkpepck cell line, which restored the glycolytic flux. We also observed that expression of PGKC is lethal for procyclic trypanosomes, as a consequence of ATP depletion, due to glycosomal relocation of cytosolic ATP production. This illustrates the key roles played by glycosomal and cytosolic kinases, including PPDK, to maintain the cellular ATP/ADP homeostasis.  相似文献   

13.
Trypanosomatids contain peroxisome-like organelles called glycosomes. Peroxisomal biogenesis involves a cytosolic receptor, PEX5, which, after its insertion into the organellar membrane, delivers proteins to the matrix. In yeasts and mammalian cells, transient PEX5 monoubiquitination at the membrane serves as the signal for its retrieval from the organelle for re-use. When its recycling is impaired, PEX5 is polyubiquitinated for proteasomal degradation. Stably monoubiquitinated TbPEX5 was detected in cytosolic fractions of Trypanosoma brucei, indicative for its role as physiological intermediate in receptor recycling. This modification's resistance to dithiothreitol suggests ubiquitin conjugation of a lysine residue. T. brucei PEX4, the functional homologue of the ubiquitin-conjugating (UBC) enzyme responsible for PEX5 monoubiquitination in yeast, was identified. It is associated with the cytosolic face of the glycosomal membrane, probably anchored by an identified putative TbPEX22. The involvement of TbPEX4 in TbPEX5 ubiquitination was demonstrated using procyclic ?PEX4 trypanosomes. Surprisingly, glycosomal matrix protein import was only mildly affected in this mutant. Since other UBC homologues were upregulated, it might be possible that these have partially rescued PEX4's function in PEX5 ubiquitination. In addition, the altered expression of UBCs, notably of candidates involved in cell-cycle control, could be responsible for observed morphological and motility defects of the ?PEX4 mutant.  相似文献   

14.
Unlike other eukaryotic cells, trypanosomes possess a compartmentalized glycolytic pathway. The conversion of glucose into 3-phosphoglycerate takes place in specialized peroxisomes, called glycosomes. Further conversion of this intermediate into pyruvate occurs in the cytosol. Due to this compartmentation, many regulatory mechanisms operating in other cell types cannot work in trypanosomes. This is reflected by the insensitivity of the glycosomal enzymes to compounds that act as activity regulators in other cell types. Several speculations have been raised about the function of compartmentation of glycolysis in trypanosomes. We calculate that even in a noncompartmentalized trypanosome the flux through glycolysis should not be limited by diffusion. Therefore, the sequestration of glycolytic enzymes in an organelle may not serve to overcome a diffusion limitation. We also search the available data for a possible relation between compartmentation and the distribution of control of the glycolytic flux among the glycolytic enzymes. Under physiological conditions, the rate of glycolytic ATP production in the bloodstream form of the parasite is possibly controlled by the oxygen tension, but not by the glucose concentration. Within the framework of Metabolic Control Analysis, we discuss evidence that glucose transport, although it does not qualify as the sole rate-limiting step, does have a high flux control coefficient. This, however, does not distinguish trypanosomes from other eukaryotic cell types without glycosomes.  相似文献   

15.
Microbody division in mammalian cells, trypanosomes, and yeast depends on the PEX11 microbody membrane proteins. The function of PEX11 is not understood, and the suggestion that it affects microbody (peroxisome) numbers in mammals and yeast, because it plays a role in beta-oxidation of fatty acids, is controversial. PEX11 and two PEX11-related proteins, GIM5A and GIM5B, are the predominant membrane proteins of the microbodies (glycosomes) of Trypanosoma brucei. The compartmentation of glycosomal enzymes is essential in trypanosomes. Deletion of the GIM5A gene from the form of the parasite that lives in the mammalian blood has no effect on trypanosome growth, but depletion of GIM5B on a gim5a null background causes death. We show here that procyclic trypanosomes, adapted for life in the Tsetse fly vector, survive without GIM5A and with very low levels of GIM5B. The depleted cells have fewer glycosomes than usual and are osmotically fragile, which is a novel observation for a microbody defect. Thus trypanosomes require both GIM5B and PEX11 for the maintenance of normal glycosome numbers. Procyclic cells lacking GIM5A, like mouse cells partially defective in PEX11, have fewer ether-linked phospholipids, even when GIM5B levels are not reduced. Metabolite measurements on GIM5A/B-depleted bloodstream form trypanosomes suggested a change in the flux through the glycolytic pathway. We conclude that PEX11 family proteins play important roles in determining microbody membrane structure, with secondary effects on a subset of microbody metabolic pathways.  相似文献   

16.
Peroxins 5 and 7 are receptors for protein import into the peroxisomal matrix. We studied the involvement of these peroxins in the biogenesis of glycosomes in the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma brucei. Glycosomes are peroxisome-like organelles in which a major part of the glycolytic pathway is sequestered. We here report the characterization of the T. brucei homologue of PEX7 and provide several data strongly suggesting that it can bind to PEX5. Depletion of PEX5 or PEX7 by RNA interference had a severe effect on the growth of both the bloodstream-form of the parasite, that relies entirely on glycolysis for its ATP supply, and the procyclic form representative of the parasite living in the tsetse-fly midgut and in which also other metabolic pathways play a prominent role. The role of the two receptors in import of glycosomal matrix proteins with different types of peroxisome/glycosome-targeting signals (PTS) was analyzed by immunofluorescence and subcellular fractionation studies. Knocking down the expression of either receptor gene resulted, in procyclic cells, in the mislocalization of proteins with both a type 1 or 2 targeting motif (PTS1, PTS2) located at the C- and N-termini, respectively, and proteins with a sequence-internal signal (I-PTS) to the cytosol. Electron microscopy confirmed the apparent integrity of glycosomes in these procyclic cells. In bloodstream-form trypanosomes, PEX7 depletion seemed to affect only the subcellular distribution of PTS2-proteins. Western blot analysis suggested that, in both life-cycle stages of the trypanosome, the levels of both receptors are controlled in a coordinated fashion, by a mechanism that remains to be determined. The observation that both PEX5 and PEX7 are essential for the viability of the parasite indicates that the respective branches of the glycosome-import pathway in which each receptor acts might be interesting drug targets.  相似文献   

17.
It is assumed that the survival factors Bcl-2 and Bcl-x(L) are mainly functional on mitochondria and therefore must contain mitochondrial targeting sequences. Here we show, however, that only Bcl-x(L) is specifically targeted to the mitochondrial outer membrane (MOM) whereas Bcl-2 distributes on several intracellular membranes. Mitochondrial targeting of Bcl-x(L) requires the COOH-terminal transmembrane (TM) domain flanked at both ends by at least two basic amino acids. This sequence is a bona fide targeting signal for the MOM as it confers specific mitochondrial localization to soluble EGFP. The signal is present in numerous proteins known to be directed to the MOM. Bcl-2 lacks the signal and therefore localizes to several intracellular membranes. The COOH-terminal region of Bcl-2 can be converted into a targeting signal for the MOM by increasing the basicity surrounding its TM. These data define a new targeting sequence for the MOM and propose that Bcl-2 acts on several intracellular membranes whereas Bcl-x(L) specifically functions on the MOM.  相似文献   

18.
Adenylate kinases are key enzymes involved in cell energy management. Trypanosomatid organisms have the largest number of isoforms found in a single cell, constituting a major difference with the mammalian hosts. In this work we study an adenylate kinase, TcADK3, the only Trypanosoma cruzi protein harboring the putative peroxisomal (glycosomal) targeting signal, "-CKL". Parasites expressing GFP fused to TcADK3 showed a strong fluorescence in the glycosomes. The same result was obtained when the tripeptide "-CKL" was added at the C-terminus of the GFP, demonstrating that this signal is necessary and sufficient for targeting proteins to glycosomes. When this tripeptide was removed from the GFP-TcADK3 fusion protein, the fluorescence was re-localized in the cytoplasm. The CKL signal could be used for targeting foreign proteins to the glycosomes. This model also provides a useful tool to study glycosomes dynamics, morphology or number in living parasites in any stage of the life cycle.  相似文献   

19.
Mislocalization of the photopigment rhodopsin may be involved in the pathology of certain inherited retinal degenerative diseases. Here, we have elucidated rhodopsin's targeting signal which is responsible for its polarized distribution to the rod outer segment (ROS). Various green fluorescent protein (GFP)/rhodopsin COOH-terminal fusion proteins were expressed specifically in the major red rod photoreceptors of transgenic Xenopus laevis under the control of the Xenopus opsin promoter. The fusion proteins were targeted to membranes via lipid modifications (palmitoylation and myristoylation) as opposed to membrane spanning domains. Membrane association was found to be necessary but not sufficient for efficient ROS localization. A GFP fusion protein containing only the cytoplasmic COOH-terminal 44 amino acids of Xenopus rhodopsin localized exclusively to ROS membranes. Chimeras between rhodopsin and alpha adrenergic receptor COOH-terminal sequences further refined rhodopsin's ROS localization signal to its distal eight amino acids. Mutations/deletions of this region resulted in partial delocalization of the fusion proteins to rod inner segment (RIS) membranes. The targeting and transport of endogenous wild-type rhodopsin was unaffected by the presence of mislocalized GFP fusion proteins.  相似文献   

20.
Tom20 is a major receptor of the mitochondrial preprotein translocation system and is bound to the outer membrane through the NH(2)-terminal transmembrane domain (TMD) in an Nin-Ccyt orientation. We analyzed the mitochondria-targeting signal of rat Tom20 (rTom20) in COS-7 cells, using green fluorescent protein (GFP) as the reporter by systematically introducing deletions or mutations into the TMD or the flanking regions. Moderate TMD hydrophobicity and a net positive charge within five residues of the COOH-terminal flanking region were both critical for mitochondria targeting. Constructs without net positive charges within the flanking region, as well as those with high TMD hydrophobicity, were targeted to the ER-Golgi compartments. Intracellular localization of rTom20-GFP fusions, determined by fluorescence microscopy, was further verified by cell fractionation. The signal recognition particle (SRP)-induced translation arrest and photo-cross-linking demonstrated that SRP recognized the TMD of rTom20-GFP, but with reduced affinity, while the positive charge at the COOH-terminal flanking segment inhibited the translation arrest. The mitochondria-targeting signal identified in vivo also functioned in the in vitro system. We conclude that NH(2)-terminal TMD with a moderate hydrophobicity and a net positive charge in the COOH-terminal flanking region function as the mitochondria-targeting signal of the outer membrane proteins, evading SRP-dependent ER targeting.  相似文献   

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