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Review
. 2009 Jun;1790(6):409-15.
doi: 10.1016/j.bbagen.2009.04.004. Epub 2009 Apr 10.

Evolution of mitochondrial protein biogenesis

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Review

Evolution of mitochondrial protein biogenesis

Stephan Kutik et al. Biochim Biophys Acta. 2009 Jun.

Abstract

Mitochondria and the nucleus are key features that distinguish eukaryotic cells from prokaryotic cells. Mitochondria originated from a bacterium that was endosymbiotically taken up by another cell more than a billion years ago. Subsequently, most mitochondrial genes were transferred and integrated into the host cell's genome, making the evolution of pathways for specific import of mitochondrial proteins necessary. The mitochondrial protein translocation machineries are composed of numerous subunits. Interestingly, many of these subunits are at least in part derived from bacterial proteins, although only few of them functioned in bacterial protein translocation. We propose that the primitive alpha-proteobacterium, which was once taken up by the eukaryote ancestor cell, contained a number of components that were utilized for the generation of mitochondrial import machineries. Many bacterial components of seemingly unrelated pathways were integrated to form the modern cooperative mitochondria-specific protein translocation system.

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