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Deletion of the Leader Peptide of the Mitochondrially Encoded Precursor of Saccharomyces cerevisiae Cytochrome c Oxidase Subunit II
Author(s) -
A. Thomas Torello,
Michael H. Overholtzer,
Vicki Cameron,
Nathalie Bonnefoy,
Thomas D. Fox
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.792
H-Index - 246
eISSN - 1943-2631
pISSN - 0016-6731
DOI - 10.1093/genetics/145.4.903
Subject(s) - biology , saccharomyces cerevisiae , signal peptide , cytochrome c oxidase , peptide sequence , intermembrane space , cytochrome c1 , protein subunit , biochemistry , mutant , cytochrome , mitochondrion , peptide , microbiology and biotechnology , mitochondrial dna , cytochrome b , gene , bacterial outer membrane , enzyme , escherichia coli
Cytochrome c oxidase subunit II (Cox2p) of Saccharomyces cerevisiae is synthesized within mitochondria as a precursor, pre-Cox2p. The 15-amino acid leader peptide is processed after export to the intermembrane space. Leader peptides are relatively unusual in mitochondrially coded proteins: indeed mammalian Cox2p lacks a leader peptide. We generated two deletions in the S. cerevisiae COX2 gene, removing either the leader peptide (cox2-20) or the leader peptide and processing site (cox2-21) without altering either the promoter or the mRNA-specific translational activation site. When inserted into mtDNA, both deletions substantially reduced the steady-state levels of Cox2p and caused a tight nonrespiratory phenotype. A respiring pseudorevertant of the cox2-20 mutant was heteroplasmic for the original mutant mtDNA and a ρ–-mtDNA whose deletion fused the first 251 codons of the mitochondrial gene encoding cytochrome b to the cox2-20 sequence. The resulting fusion protein was processed to yield functional Cox2p. Thus, the presence of amino-terminal cytochrome b sequence bypassed the need for the pre-Cox2p leader peptide. We propose that the pre-Cox2p leader peptide contains a targeting signal necessary for membrane insertion, without which it remains in the matrix and is rapidly degraded.

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