Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.21.4 (trypsin)
42,187 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The mitochondrial import of a member of the "chaperonin" group of proteins which play an essential role in the import of protein into organelles and their subsequent proper folding has been examined. The cDNA for human hsp60 (synonyms: GroEL homolog, P1) was transcribed and translated in vitro and its import into isolated rat heart mitochondria examined. The protein was converted into a mature form of lower molecular mass (= 58 kDa) which was resistant to trypsin treatment. The import of human hsp60 into mitochondria was inhibited in the presence of an uncoupler and also no import occurred when the N-terminal presequence was lacking. These results indicate that the chaperonin protein(s) are transported into mitochondria by a process similar to other imported mitochondrial proteins. Our results also indicate that although the P1 protein precursor was efficiently imported into mitochondria, in comparison to precursors of other mitochondrial proteins (viz. ornithine carbamoyltransferase and uncoupling protein) much less binding of pre P1 to mitochondria was observed. The significance of this latter observation at present is unclear.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial import of the human chaperonin (HSP60) protein. 197 19

The signal peptides of pre-aldehyde dehydrogenase (22-mer) and pre-ornithine transcarbamylase (27-mer) were chemically synthesized and their imports into rat liver mitochondria were studied. Both signal peptides were imported rapidly (within 2 min) in the absence of a membrane potential, exogenous ATP, or rabbit reticulocyte lysate. Signal peptides also were imported into mitochondria treated with a low concentration of trypsin which removed the outer membrane proteins. It was concluded that the chemically synthesized signal peptide could be imported differently than the precursor proteins. The imported signal peptide were found to be associated with both outer and inner membranes. Pulse-chase experiments showed that the import was unidirectional and that the signal peptides associated with inner membranes increased during the chase time. The signal peptides inhibited import of precursor proteins to different extents. Association of signal peptides with inner membrane near or at translocator sites might result in inhibition of precursor import.
...
PMID:Import of chemically synthesized signal peptides into rat liver mitochondria. 238 52

The precursor of ornithine carbamoyltransferase can be transported in vitro into rat liver mitochondria using the postmitochondrial supernatant from rat liver, a more homologous medium than the commonly used rabbit reticulocyte lysate. The transport of the precursor in the case of reticulocyte lysate requires a standard translation mixture. In the presence of the postmitochondrial supernatant the same is true. However, when the components of the translation mixture were added individually to the postmitochondrial supernatant, it was found that spermidine or spermine, at physiological concentrations, sufficed for the transport of the precursor of ornithine carbamoyltransferase. The activity of the postmitochondrial supernatant was inactivated by trypsin and slightly decreased by RNase treatment; it was not lost by dialysis or by heating at 100 degrees C.
...
PMID:In vitro transport of ornithine carbamoyltransferase precursor into rat liver mitochondria using a more homologous medium. 281 97

The cytoplasmically made subunits 2 (beta) and 3 (gamma) of the H+-ATPase from mammalian mitochondria are synthesized in vitro as larger polypeptides. In contrast, pre-cytochrome c could not, on the basis of its molecular weight, be distinguished from the mature polypeptide. This was shown by programming a reticulocyte lysate with rat heart RNA and immunoprecipitating the labeled translation products with polypeptide-specific antibodies. When a translated lysate containing the precursor to the beta-subunit was incubated with isolated rat spleen mitochondria, it was converted to the mature subunit and was no longer susceptible to externally added trypsin. The conversion to the mature form occurred in the absence of protein synthesis. This post-translational maturation process of the beta-subunit was more efficient when carried out with spleen or liver mitochondria than with heart or kidney mitochondria. The converse relative efficiency was observed when the processing of the precursor to ornithine carbamyltransferase by these mitochondria was examined. These results indicate that mitochondria do not discriminate against tissue-specific mitochondrial proteins. In addition, the observed varying degrees of efficiency of mitochondria from different tissues in importing and processing these two precursors suggest that the activity of precursor(s)-specific translocation-maturation systems varies between different types of mitochondria.
...
PMID:Differential import and processing of the precursors to F1-ATPase beta-subunit and ornithine carbamyltransferase by liver, spleen, heart and kidney mitochondria. 286 Sep 3

We have investigated mitochondrial import and processing of the precursor for human ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC; carbamoylphosphate:L-ornithine carbamoyltransferase, EC 2.1.3.3) in HeLa cells stably transformed with cDNA sequences encoding OTC precursors carrying mutations in their leader peptides. The mutant precursors studied included two with amino acid substitutions in the 32-amino-acid leader peptide (glycine for arginine at position 23, designated gly23; glycines for arginines at positions 15, 23, and 26, designated gly15,23,26) and two with deletions (deletion of residues 8 to 22, designated d8-22; deletion of residues 17 to 32, designated N16). Specific immunoprecipitation with anti-OTC antiserum of extracts of L-[35S]methionine-labeled cells expressing these mutations yielded only precursor species; neither mature nor intermediate-size OTC subunits were observed. Fractionation of radiolabeled cells, however, revealed important differences among the various mutants: the gly23 precursor was associated with mitochondria and was not detected in the cytosol; the d8-22 and N16 precursors were found with both the mitochondrial fraction and the cytosol; only the gly15,23,26 precursor was detected exclusively in the cytosol. A large fraction of each of the mitochondrially associated OTC species was in a trypsin-protected compartment. In particular, the gly23 precursor behaved in trypsin protection and mitochondrial fractionation studies in a manner consistent with its translocation into the mitochondrial matrix. On the other hand, the lack of binding of the gly23 protein to a delta-N-phosphonoacetyl-L-ornithine affinity column, which specifically recognizes active OTC enzyme, indicated that, despite its intramitochondrial location, the mutant protein did not assemble into the normal, active trimer. Further, the gly23 mutant precursor was unstable within the mitochondria and was degraded with a t1/2 of less further than 4 h. Thus, we have shown that, in intact HeLa cells, cleavage of the OTC leader peptide is not required for translocation into mitochondria, but is required for assembly into active enzyme.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial import and processing of mutant human ornithine transcarbamylase precursors in cultured cells. 324 50

Chemical cross-linking procedures have been employed to study possible interactions between components of the mitochondrial outer membrane and NH2-terminal signal sequences located in proteins destined for import into the organelle. A synthetic peptide comprising amino acids 1-27 of pre-ornithine carbamyltransferase (pOCT) was found to interact specifically with a mitochondrial polypeptide of apparent molecular size 30 kDa. Membrane fractionation and protease accessibility analyses indicated that the polypeptide, designated p30, is located in the outer membrane. Binding of the synthetic peptide to p30 was saturable and reversible; Scatchard analysis of the binding data revealed a dissociation constant of 2 X 10(-6) M and predicts that p30 constitutes 4-10% of the outer mitochondrial membrane protein. Mild trypsin digestion of the mitochondrial surface destroyed both the ability of p30 to cross-link to the signal peptide and the ability of the organelle to import pOCT. Neither parameter was affected, however, by pretreatment of mitochondria with 1 M KCl.
...
PMID:Identification of an outer mitochondrial membrane protein that interacts with a synthetic signal peptide. 359 55

The mitochondrial matrix enzyme ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) is synthesized on cytoplasmic polyribosomes as a precursor (pOTC) with an NH2-terminal extension of 32 amino acids. We report here that rat pOTC synthesized in vitro is internalized and cleaved by isolated rat liver mitochondria in two, temporally separate steps. In the first step, which is dependent upon an intact mitochondrial membrane potential, pOTC is translocated into mitochondria and cleaved by a matrix protease to a product designated iOTC, intermediate in size between pOTC and mature OTC. This product is in a trypsin-protected mitochondrial location. The same intermediate-sized OTC is produced in vivo in frog oocytes injected with in vitro-synthesized pOTC. The proteolytic processing of pOTC to iOTC involves the removal of 24 amino acids from the NH2 terminus of the precursor and utilizes a cleavage site two residues away from a critical arginine residue at position 23. In a second cleavage step, also catalyzed by a matrix protease, iOTC is converted to mature OTC by removal of the remaining eight residues of leader sequence. To define the critical regions in the OTC leader peptide required for these events, we have synthesized OTC precursors with alterations in the leader. Substitution of either an acidic (aspartate) or a "helix-breaking" (glycine) amino acid residue for arginine 23 of the leader inhibits formation of both iOTC and OTC, without affecting translocation. These mutant precursors are cleaved at an otherwise cryptic cleavage site between residues 16 and 17 of the leader. Interestingly, this cleavage occurs at a site two residues away from an arginine at position 15. The data indicate that conversion of pOTC to mature OTC proceeds via the formation of a third discrete species: an intermediate-sized OTC. The data suggest further that, in the rat pOTC leader, the essential elements required for translocation differ from those necessary for correct cleavage to either iOTC or mature OTC.
...
PMID:Import of rat ornithine transcarbamylase precursor into mitochondria: two-step processing of the leader peptide. 369 95

Most mitochondrial proteins are encoded in the nucleus and synthesized in the cytoplasm as larger precursors containing NH2-terminal 'leader' peptides. To test whether a leader peptide is sufficient to direct mitochondrial import, we fused the cloned nucleotide sequence encoding the leader peptide of the mitochondrial matrix enzyme ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) with the sequence encoding the cytosolic enzyme dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR). The fused sequence, joined with SV40 regulatory elements, was introduced along with a selectable marker into a mutant CHO cell line devoid of endogenous DHFR. In stable transformants, the predicted 26-K chimeric precursor protein and two additional proteins, 22 K and 20 K, were detected by immunoprecipitation with anti-DHFR antiserum. In the presence of rhodamine 6G, an inhibitor of mitochondrial import, only the chimeric precursor was detected. Immunofluorescent staining of stably transformed cells with anti-DHFR antiserum produced a pattern characteristic of mitochondrial localization of immunoreactive material. When the chimeric precursor was synthesized in a cell-free system and incubated post-translationally with isolated rat liver mitochondria, it was imported and converted to a major product of 20 K that associated with mitochondria and was resistant to proteolytic digestion by externally added trypsin. Thus, both in intact cells and in vitro, a leader sequence is sufficient to direct the post-translational import of a chimeric precursor protein by mitochondria.
...
PMID:A leader peptide is sufficient to direct mitochondrial import of a chimeric protein. 389 25

Carbamyl phosphate synthetase I and ornithine transcarbamylase are matrix enzymes synthesized outside the mitochondria in the form of larger precursors and are transported rapidly into mitochondria, in association with post-translational proteolytic processing to the mature enzymes. Treatment of isolated rat hepatocytes with 40 micrograms/ml of rhodamine 123 resulted both in a potent inhibition of the processing of the enzyme precursors and in accumulation of the precursors. In pulse-chase experiments, the labeled precursor disappeared much more slowly in the presence of the dye. Rhodamine 123 strongly inhibited the uptake and processing of the ornithine transcarbamylase precursor by isolated rat liver mitochondria. Other positively charged rhodamines such as rhodamines 6G and 6GX were also strongly inhibitory. On the other hand, rhodamine B which has no net charge was much less inhibitory. These results suggest that the positively charged rhodamines inhibit the binding of the positively charged enzyme precursors to a negatively charged protein(s) or to phospholipids of the mitochondrial outer membrane. Potassium and magnesium ions, and probably a cytosolic protein(s), were required for the maximal uptake and processing of the ornithine transcarbamylase precursor by the isolated mitochondria. The concentrations of potassium and magnesium ions required for the maximal transport and processing were about 120 mM and 0.8-1.6 mM, respectively. Dialyzed postribosomal supernatant of rabbit reticulocyte lysate (36-72 mg protein/ml), in combination with potassium and magnesium ions, stimulated the precursor transport and processing 3- to 4-fold. The stimulatory activity of the dialyzed lysate was inactivated by trypsin treatment or heat treatment. No significant amount of the enzyme precursor was associated with the mitochondria when incubation was performed in the absence of these compounds. All these results indicate that potassium and magnesium ions, and probably a cytosolic protein(s), are required for the binding of the ornithine transcarbamylase precursor to the mitochondria or its transport into the organelle.
...
PMID:Synthesis, intracellular transport and processing of mitochondrial urea cycle enzymes. 654 81

The mitochondrial proteins involved in adrenocortical steroidogenesis are synthesized as higher molecular weight precursors which require processing by the mitochondria to their mature sizes. The post-translational maturation of two of these proteins has been examined: the cholesterol side chain cleavage cytochrome P-450 (P-450scc) and the iron-sulfur protein, adrenodoxin. Total translation products synthesized in a cell-free system programmed by bovine adrenocortical poly(A+) RNA were incubated with isolated bovine adrenocortical or heart mitochondria followed by immunoisolation of radiolabeled P-450scc or adrenodoxin. In the presence of adrenocortical mitochondria, the precursor form of P-450scc was converted into a trypsin-resistant form that had the same molecular weight as mature P-450scc. Unlike adrenocortical mitochondria, heart mitochondria were unable to process the P-450scc precursor which remained unaltered and trypsin-sensitive. In addition, a matrix fraction of heart mitochondria did not cleave the P-450scc precursor. In contrast, the adrenodoxin precursor did not exhibit similar specificity as it was processed to the mature form by both adrenocortical and heart mitochondria. Also, the adrenocortical mitochondria were not restricted to processing endogenous proteins as they imported and cleaved the precursor to ornithine transcarbamylase. The results indicate that some mitochondrial precursor proteins have tertiary structures which allow them to be recognized by all mitochondria while other mitochondrial precursor proteins have structures recognizable by only specialized mitochondria.
...
PMID:Discriminatory processing of the precursor forms of cytochrome P-450scc and adrenodoxin by adrenocortical and heart mitochondria. 673 44


1 2 Next >>