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Query: EC:3.4.24.64 (MPP)
1,876 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A number of nuclearly encoded mitochondrial protein precursors that are transported into the matrix and inner membrane are cleaved in two sequential steps by two distinct matrix peptidases, mitochondrial processing peptidase (MPP) and mitochondrial intermediate peptidase (MIP). We have isolated and purified MIP from rat liver mitochondrial matrix. The enzyme, purified 2250-fold, is a monomer of 75 kDa and cleaves all tested mitochondrial intermediate proteins to their mature forms. About 20% of the final MIP preparation consists of equimolar amounts of two peptides of 47 kDa and 28 kDa, which are apparently the products of a single cleavage of the 75 kDa protein. These peptides are not separable from the 75 kDa protein, nor from each other, under any conditions used in the purification. The peptidase has a broad pH optimum between pH 6.6 and 8.9 and is inactivated by N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) and other sulfhydryl group reagents. The processing activity is divalent cation-dependent; it is stimulated by manganese, magnesium or calcium ions and reversibly inhibited by EDTA. Zinc, cobalt and iron strongly inhibit MIP activity. This pattern of cation dependence and inhibition is not clearly consistent with that of any known family of proteases.
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PMID:Rat liver mitochondrial intermediate peptidase (MIP): purification and initial characterization. 132 90

Proteolytic removal of amino-terminal octapeptides from mitochondrial intermediate proteins is a required step for a subgroup of nuclear-encoded mitochondrial precursors and is specifically catalyzed by mitochondrial intermediate peptidase (MIP). We recently reported the purification of MIP from rat liver and showed that the enzyme is a monomer of 75 kDa. We now report the sequence of a full-length rat MIP cDNA. This cDNA codes for a protein of 710 amino acids, including an amino-terminal mitochondrial leader peptide of 33 residues. The region surrounding the mature MIP amino terminus shows a cleavage site typically recognized by the general mitochondrial processing peptidase (MPP). In vitro synthesized MIP precursor is cleaved to mature MIP by purified MPP, and thus MIP is not required for its own proteolytic maturation. Comparison of the deduced MIP sequence with other sequences in the GenBank data base reveals two important similarities. The first is to a sequence encoding a putative MIP homologue in the recently reported sequence of yeast chromosome III. The putative yeast protein is predicted to be 712 amino acids long and includes a putative 23-residue mitochondrial leader peptide also with a MPP processing site. It shows 47% similarity and 24% identity to rat MIP. The second similarity is to members of a subfamily of metallopeptidases that includes rat metalloendopeptidase EC 3.4.24.15 and two bacterial proteases, oligopeptidase A and dipeptidyl carboxypeptidase. A region of greater than 50% similarity over 400 residues between MIP and these proteins is centered around the sequence motif HEXXH, typical of zinc metallopeptidases.
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PMID:Sequence analysis of rat mitochondrial intermediate peptidase: similarity to zinc metallopeptidases and to a putative yeast homologue. 151 64

We have shown previously that cleavage of a number of precursors by the mitochondrial processing peptidase (MPP) requires an intermediate octapeptide (FXXSXXXX) between the MPP cleavage site and the mature protein amino terminus. We show now that these octapeptides, present at the amino termini of the intermediates, direct recognition of these substrates by the mitochondrial intermediate peptidase (MIP), leading to formation of mature proteins. Synthetic peptides, corresponding to the intermediate octapeptides of human ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) and of Neurospora cytochrome c reductase Fe/S subunit (Fe/S), inhibit the processing activity of purified rat liver MIP in vitro, without affecting MPP activity; this indicates that the octapeptides can be recognized by MIP independent of the presence of the corresponding mature proteins and interact with a site that is crucial for MIP activity. MIP activity is not inhibited by a peptide lacking the amino-terminal hydrophobic residue, while substitution of such a residue by a polar amino acid causes a 10-fold reduction in the efficiency of MIP inhibition. To analyze the requirements for removal of the octapeptide from the intermediate proteins by MIP, artificial intermediates were synthesized and subjected to in vitro processing by purified MIP. The octapeptide can be cleaved by MIP only when the amino-terminal hydrophobic residue is also the amino terminus of the intermediate. Further, when the OTC octapeptide is joined to the mature amino terminus of another twice-cleaved precursor (pFe/S; rat malate dehydrogenase, pMDH), the chimeric intermediate is cleaved by MIP to the corresponding mature-sized protein. When the OTC octapeptide is joined to the mature amino terminus of a once-cleaved precursor (yeast F1-beta-ATPase, pF1-beta), however, this intermediate is not cleaved by MIP; rather, it is processed by MPP to mature-sized F1-beta. Therefore, amino-terminal octapeptides can be cleaved by MIP only within the structural context of twice-cleaved precursors.
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PMID:Amino-terminal octapeptides function as recognition signals for the mitochondrial intermediate peptidase. 156 19

Many precursors of mitochondrial proteins are processed in two successive steps by independent matrix peptidases (MPP and MIP), whereas others are cleaved in a single step by MPP alone. To explain this dichotomy, we have constructed deletions of all or part of the octapeptide characteristic of a twice cleaved precursor (human ornithine transcarbamylase [pOTC]), have exchanged leader peptide sequences between once-cleaved (human methylmalonyl-CoA mutase [pMUT]; yeast F1ATPase beta-subunit [pF1 beta]) and twice-cleaved (pOTC; rat malate dehydrogenase (pMDH); Neurospora ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase iron-sulfur subunit [pFe/S]) precursors, and have incubated these proteins with purified MPP and MIP. When the octapeptide of pOTC was deleted, or when the entire leader peptide of a once-cleaved precursor (pMUT or pF1 beta) was joined to the mature amino terminus of a twice-cleaved precursor (pOTC or pFe/S), no cleavage was produced by either protease. Cleavage of these constructs by MPP was restored by re-inserting as few as two amino-terminal residues of the octapeptide or of the mature amino terminus of a once-cleaved precursor. We conclude that the mature amino terminus of a twice-cleaved precursor is structurally incompatible with cleavage by MPP; such proteins have evolved octapeptides cleaved by MIP to overcome this incompatibility.
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PMID:Cleavage of precursors by the mitochondrial processing peptidase requires a compatible mature protein or an intermediate octapeptide. 167 32

Most mitochondrial precursor proteins are processed to the mature form in one step by mitochondrial processing peptidase (MPP), while a subset of precursors destined for the matrix or the inner membrane are cleaved sequentially by MPP and mitochondrial intermediate peptidase (MIP). We showed previously that yeast MIP (YMIP) is required for mitochondrial function in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. To further define the role played by two-step processing in mitochondrial biogenesis, we have now characterized the natural substrates of YMIP. A total of 133 known yeast mitochondrial precursors were collected from the literature and analyzed for the presence of the motif RX(decreases)(F/L/I)XX(T/S/G)XXXX(decreases), typical of precursors cleaved by MPP and MIP. We found characteristic MIP cleavage sites in two distinct sets of proteins: respiratory components, including subunits of the electron transport chain and tricarboxylic acid cycle enzymes, and components of the mitochondrial genetic machinery, including ribosomal proteins, translation factors, and proteins required for mitochondrial DNA metabolism. Representative precursors from both sets were cleaved to predominantly mature form by mitochondrial matrix or intact mitochondria from wild-type yeast. In contrast, intermediate-size forms were accumulated upon incubation of the precursors with matrix from mip1 delta yeast or intact mitochondria from mip1ts yeast, indicating that YMIP is necessary for maturation of these proteins. Consistent with the fact that some of these substrates are essential for the maintenance of mitochondrial protein synthesis and mitochondrial DNA replication, mip1 delta yeast undergoes loss of functional mitochondrial genomes.
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PMID:Prediction and identification of new natural substrates of the yeast mitochondrial intermediate peptidase. 759

The iron-sulfur protein of the cytochrome bc1 complex is one of a small number of proteins that are processed in two sequential steps by matrix processing peptidase (MPP) and mitochondrial intermediate peptidase (MIP) during import into Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondria. To test whether two-step processing is necessary for import and assembly of the iron-sulfur protein into the cytochrome bc1 complex, we mutagenized the presequence of the iron-sulfur protein to eliminate the original MPP site and replace the MIP site with a new MPP site. The mutated presequence is cleaved and forms mature-sized protein in a single step, and the mature-sized iron-sulfur protein is correctly targeted to the outer side of the inner mitochondrial membrane in vitro. Mutant iron-sulfur protein which is processed to mature size in one step complements the respiratory deficient phenotype of a yeast strain in which the endogenous gene for the iron-sulfur protein is deleted. These results establish that mature-sized iron-sulfur protein can be formed by single-step processing and assembled into a functionally active form in the cytochrome bc1 complex in S. cerevisiae.
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PMID:Two-step processing is not essential for the import and assembly of functionally active iron-sulfur protein into the cytochrome bc1 complex in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 899 25

cDNA clones encoding subunit VII of the Neurospora crassa bc1 complex (ubiquinol:cytochrome-c oxidoreductase), which is homologous with subunit VIII of the complex from yeast (encoded by QCR8), were identified on the basis of functional complementation of a yeast QCR8 deletion strain. The clones contain an open reading frame encoding a protein with a calculated molecular mass of 11.8 kDa. The N-terminal eight residues of the amino acid sequence deduced from the cDNA clones are absent from the mature protein, as revealed by direct sequencing of the isolated protein. To investigate the potential role of the N-terminal octapeptide in mitochondrial targeting, constructs were made encoding the precursor and the mature form of subunit VII from Neurospora. Incubation of isolated mitochondria with the two proteins revealed that the N-terminal extension of the precursor is removed on import. However, the presequence does not encode information for targeting, as the proteins encoded by both constructs can be imported into isolated mitochondria with equal efficiency. In contrast, the octapeptide seems to have functional importance: the defect in the yeast qcr8-null mutant is not complemented on transformation with the construct encoding mature subunit VII from N. crassa in a single-copy plasmid. We therefore speculate that the N-terminal extension plays a role in intramitochondrial sorting of N. crassa subunit VII. This is supported by the fact that the subunit VII precursor is processed by a protease other than the general mitochondrial processing peptidase. Interestingly, the presequence of N. crassa subunit VII has an amino acid composition similar to the octapeptides cleaved off by the mitochondrial intermediate peptidase.
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PMID:Subunit VII of ubiquinol:cytochrome-c oxidoreductase from Neurospora crassa is functional in yeast and has an N-terminal extension that is not essential for mitochondrial targeting. 900 61

The iron-sulfur proteins of the cytochrome bc1 complexes of Schizosaccharomyces pombe and Saccharomyces cerevisiae contain the three amino acid motif RX( downward arrow)(F/L/I)XX(T/S/G)XXXX (downward arrow) that is typical for proteins that are cleaved sequentially in two steps by matrix processing peptidase (MPP) and mitochondrial intermediate peptidase (MIP). Despite the presence of this recognition sequence the S. pombe iron-sulfur protein is processed only once during import into mitochondria, whereas the S. cerevisiae protein is processed in two steps. Import of S. pombe iron-sulfur protein in which the putative MIP or MPP recognition sites are eliminated by site-directed mutagenesis and import of iron-sulfur protein into mitochondria from yeast mutants that lack MIP activity indicate that one step processing of the S. pombe iron-sulfur protein is independent of those sites and of MIP activity. Sequencing of the mature protein obtained after import in vitro and of the endogenous iron-sulfur protein isolated from mitochondrial membranes by preparative 2D-electrophoresis shows that MPP recognizes a second site in the presequence and processing occurs between residues 43 and 44. If proline-20 of the S. pombe presequence is changed into a serine, a second cleavage step is induced. Conversely, if serine-24 of the S. cerevisiae presequence is changed to a proline, the first cleavage step that is normally catalyzed by MPP is blocked, causing precursor iron-sulfur protein to accumulate. Together these results indicate that a single amino acid change in the presequence is responsible for one-step processing in S. pombe versus two-step processing in S. cerevisiae.
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PMID:Processing of the presequence of the Schizosaccharomyces pombe Rieske iron-sulfur protein occurs in a single step and can be converted to two-step processing by mutation of a single proline to serine in the presequence. 953 40

To investigate the relationship between post-translational processing of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and its assembly into the mitochondrial cytochrome bc1 complex we used iron-sulfur proteins in which the presequences had been changed by site-directed mutagenesis of the cloned iron-sulfur protein gene, so that the recognition sites for the matrix processing peptidase or the mitochondrial intermediate peptidase (MIP) had been destroyed. When yeast strain JPJ1, in which the gene for the iron-sulfur protein is deleted, was transformed with these constructs on a single copy expression vector, mitochondrial membranes and bc1 complexes isolated from these strains accumulated intermediate length iron-sulfur proteins in vivo. The cytochrome bc1 complex activities of these membranes and bc1 complexes indicate that intermediate iron-sulfur protein (i-ISP) has full activity when compared with that of mature sized iron-sulfur protein (m-ISP). Therefore the iron-sulfur cluster must have been inserted before processing of i-ISP to m-ISP by MIP. When iron-sulfur protein is imported into mitochondria in vitro, i-ISP interacts with components of the bc1 complex before it is processed to m-ISP. These results establish that the iron-sulfur cluster is inserted into the apoprotein before MIP cleaves off the second part of the presequence and that this second processing step takes place after i-ISP has been assembled into the bc1 complex.
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PMID:Intermediate length Rieske iron-sulfur protein is present and functionally active in the cytochrome bc1 complex of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 1009 99

Mitochondria import most of their proteins from the cytosol. Precursor forms of most matrix proteins as well as some IM and IMS proteins are synthesized on cytoplasmic ribosomes with N-terminal cleavable signal sequences. Many other mitochondrial proteins including IM carrier proteins contain internal targeting sequences. Three multisubunit translocases, one in the OM and two in the IM, participate in the import process. These translocases co-operate with cytosolic chaperones, chaperone-like soluble proteins in the IMS as well as chaperones in the matrix. Insertion of carrier proteins into the IM only requires a membrane potential. On the other hand, translocation of preproteins across the IM into the matrix requires (i) a membrane potential, (ii) GTP hydrolysis, which occurs at the outer side of the IM, and (iii) ATP-dependent interactions occurring at the matrix side. Following import, the cleavable signal sequence of most preproteins is removed in one step by the MPP. In some cases, removal of the signal sequence is achieved in two steps; first by MPP and second by either mitochondrial intermediate peptidase or by IM peptidases. Imported proteins must be folded properly to perform their functions.
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PMID:Mechanisms of mitochondrial protein import. 1247 3


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