Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Mol. Cell. Biol., Jan 1998, 178-187, Vol 18, No. 1
KR Ryan, RS Leung and RE Jensen
Tim23p is a mitochondrial inner membrane protein essential for the import
of proteins from the cytosol. Tim23p contains an amino-terminal hydrophilic
segment and a carboxyl-terminal hydrophobic domain (Tim23Cp). To study the
functions and interactions of the two parts of Tim23p separately, we
constructed tim23N, encoding only the hydrophilic region of Tim23p, and
tim23C, encoding only the hydrophobic domain of Tim23p. Only the Tim23C
protein is imported into mitochondria, indicating that the mitochondrial
targeting information in Tim23p resides in its membrane spans or
intervening loops. Tim23Cp, however, cannot substitute for full-length
Tim23p, suggesting that the hydrophilic portion of Tim23p also performs an
essential function in mitochondrial protein import. We found that
overexpression of Tim23Cp is toxic to yeast cells that carry the tim23-1
mutation. Excess Tim23Cp causes Tim23-1p to disappear, leaving tim23-1
cells without a full- length version of the Tim23 protein. If Tim17p,
another inner membrane import component, is overexpressed along with
Tim23Cp, the toxicity of Tim23Cp is largely reversed and the Tim23-1
protein no longer disappears. In coimmunoprecipitations from solubilized
mitochondria, Tim17p associates with the Tim23C protein. In addition, we
show that Tim23p and Tim17p can be chemically cross-linked to each other in
intact mitochondria. We conclude that the hydrophobic domain encoded by
tim23C targets Tim23p to the mitochondria and mediates the direct
interaction between Tim23p and Tim17p. In contrast, Tim23Cp cannot be
coimmunoprecipitated with Tim23p, raising the possibility that the
hydrophobic domain of Tim23p does not interact with other Tim23 molecules.
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology
Characterization of the mitochondrial inner membrane translocase complex: the Tim23p hydrophobic domain interacts with Tim17p but not with other Tim23p molecules
Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205, USA.
This article has been cited by other articles:
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»