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The Mitochondrial Receptor Complex: Mom22 Is Essential for Cell Viability and Directly Interacts with Preproteins†
Author(s) -
Angelika Hönlinger,
Michael Kübrich,
Martin Moczko,
Frank Gärtner,
Laurent Mallet,
Françoise Bussereau,
Christoph Eckerskorn,
Fritz Lottspeich,
Klaus Dietmeier,
Michel Jacquet,
Nikolaus Pfanner
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
molecular and cellular biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.14
H-Index - 327
eISSN - 1067-8824
pISSN - 0270-7306
DOI - 10.1128/mcb.15.6.3382
Subject(s) - biology , microbiology and biotechnology , receptor , translocase of the inner membrane , saccharomyces cerevisiae , mitochondrion , liver receptor homolog 1 , inner membrane , inner mitochondrial membrane , yeast , mitochondrial membrane transport protein , biochemistry , nuclear receptor , gene , transcription factor
A multisubunit complex in the mitochondrial outer membrane is responsible for targeting and membrane translocation of nuclear-encoded preproteins. This receptor complex contains two import receptors, a general insertion pore and the protein Mom22. It was unknown if Mom22 directly interacts with preproteins, and two views existed about the possible functions of Mom22: a central role in transfer of preproteins from both receptors to the general insertion pore or a more limited function dependent on the presence of the receptor Mom19. For this report, we identified and cloned Saccharomyces cerevisiae MOM22 and investigated whether it plays a direct role in targeting of preproteins. A preprotein accumulated at the mitochondrial outer membrane was cross-linked to Mom22. The cross-linking depended on the import stage of the preprotein. Overexpression of Mom22 suppressed the respiratory defect of yeast cells lacking Mom19 and increased preprotein import into mom19 delta mitochondria, demonstrating that Mom22 can function independently of Mom19. Overexpression of Mom22 even suppressed the lethal phenotype of a double deletion of the two import receptors known so far (mom19 delta mom72 delta). Deletion of the MOM22 gene was lethal for yeast cells, identifying Mom22 as one of the few mitochondrial membrane proteins essential for fermentative growth. These results suggest that Mom22 plays an essential role in the mitochondrial receptor complex. It directly interacts with preproteins in transit and can perform receptor-like activities.

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