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Binding of mitochondrial leader sequences to Tom20 assessed using a bacterial two‐hybrid system shows that hydrophobic interactions are essential and that some mutated leaders that do not bind Tom20 can still be imported
Author(s) -
Mukhopadhyay Abhijit,
Yang Chunsong,
Weiner Henry
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
protein science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.353
H-Index - 175
eISSN - 1469-896X
pISSN - 0961-8368
DOI - 10.1110/ps.062462006
Subject(s) - bacterial outer membrane , mutant , biochemistry , mitochondrial carrier , binding site , biology , alanine , plasma protein binding , leucine , translocator protein , microbiology and biotechnology , biophysics , amino acid , escherichia coli , neuroinflammation , immunology , inflammation , gene
Previous studies pointed to the importance of leucine residues in the binding of mitochondrial leader sequences to Tom20, an outer membrane protein translocator that initially binds the leader during import. A bacteria two‐hybrid assay was here employed to determine if this could be an alternative way to investigate the binding of leader to the receptor. Leucine to alanine and arginine to glutamine mutations were made in the leader sequence from rat liver aldehyde dehydrogenase (pALDH). The leucine residues in the C‐terminal of pALDH leader were found to be essential for TOM20 binding. The hydrophobic residues of another mitochondrial leader F1β‐ATPase that were important for Tom20 binding were found at the C‐terminus of the leader. In contrast, it was the leucines in the N‐terminus of the leader of ornithine transcarbamylase that were essential for binding. Modeling the peptides to the structure of Tom20 showed that the hydrophobic residues from the three proteins could all fit into the hydrophobic binding pocket. The mutants of pALDH that did not bind to Tom20 were still imported in vivo in transformed HeLa cells or in vitro into isolated mitochondria. In contrast, the mutant from pOTC was imported less well (∼50%) while the mutant from F1β‐ATPase was not imported to any measurable extent. Binding to Tom20 might not be a prerequisite for import; however, it also is possible that import can occur even if binding to a receptor component is poor, so long as the leader binds tightly to another component of the translocator.

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