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Determinism and contingencies shaped the evolution of mitochondrial protein import
S. Rout, S. Oeljeklaus, A. Makki, J. Tachezy, B. Warscheid, A. Schneider
Jazyk angličtina Země Spojené státy americké
Typ dokumentu časopisecké články, práce podpořená grantem
 NLK 
   
      Free Medical Journals
   
    od 1915
   
      Freely Accessible Science Journals
   
    od 1915 do Před 6 měsíci
   
      PubMed Central
   
    od 1915 do Před 6 měsíci
   
      Europe PubMed Central
   
    od 1915 do Před 6 měsíci
   
      Open Access Digital Library
   
    od 1915-01-15
   
      Open Access Digital Library
   
    od 1915-01-01
    
    PubMed
          
           33526678
           
          
          
    DOI
          
           10.1073/pnas.2017774118
           
          
          
  
    Knihovny.cz E-zdroje
    
  
              
      
- MeSH
 - mitochondriální proteiny genetika MeSH
 - mitochondrie genetika metabolismus MeSH
 - molekulární evoluce * MeSH
 - proteinové prekurzory genetika MeSH
 - Saccharomyces cerevisiae - proteiny genetika MeSH
 - Saccharomyces cerevisiae genetika MeSH
 - transport proteinů genetika MeSH
 - transportní proteiny mitochondriální membrány genetika MeSH
 - transportní proteiny genetika MeSH
 - Trypanosoma brucei brucei genetika metabolismus patogenita MeSH
 - vazba proteinů MeSH
 - zvířata MeSH
 - Check Tag
 - zvířata MeSH
 - Publikační typ
 - časopisecké články MeSH
 - práce podpořená grantem MeSH
 
Mitochondrial protein import requires outer membrane receptors that evolved independently in different lineages. Here we used quantitative proteomics and in vitro binding assays to investigate the substrate preferences of ATOM46 and ATOM69, the two mitochondrial import receptors of Trypanosoma brucei The results show that ATOM46 prefers presequence-containing, hydrophilic proteins that lack transmembrane domains (TMDs), whereas ATOM69 prefers presequence-lacking, hydrophobic substrates that have TMDs. Thus, the ATOM46/yeast Tom20 and the ATOM69/yeast Tom70 pairs have similar substrate preferences. However, ATOM46 mainly uses electrostatic, and Tom20 hydrophobic, interactions for substrate binding. In vivo replacement of T. brucei ATOM46 by yeast Tom20 did not restore import. However, replacement of ATOM69 by the recently discovered Tom36 receptor of Trichomonas hydrogenosomes, while not allowing for growth, restored import of a large subset of trypanosomal proteins that lack TMDs. Thus, even though ATOM69 and Tom36 share the same domain structure and topology, they have different substrate preferences. The study establishes complementation experiments, combined with quantitative proteomics, as a highly versatile and sensitive method to compare in vivo preferences of protein import receptors. Moreover, it illustrates the role determinism and contingencies played in the evolution of mitochondrial protein import receptors.
Department of Parasitology Faculty of Science Charles University BIOCEV 12843 Prague Czech Republic
Signalling Research Centres BIOSS and CIBSS University of Freiburg 79104 Freiburg Germany
Citace poskytuje Crossref.org
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