Membrane and cytosolic components affecting transport of the precursor for ornithine carbamyltransferase into mitochondria
- PMID: 6853495
Membrane and cytosolic components affecting transport of the precursor for ornithine carbamyltransferase into mitochondria
Abstract
A higher molecular weight precursor (Mr = 39,000) to the liver mitochondrial matrix enzyme, ornithine carbamyltransferase (Mr = 36,000), is imported and processed by heart mitochondria in vitro in a manner similar to liver mitochondria. In both systems, however, an additional 37-kDa ornithine carbamyltransferase polypeptide appears, but this arises from nonspecific events and, therefore, does not represent a bona fide intermediate in the overall processing sequence. Our experiments demonstrate that the outer mitochondrial membrane of mitochondria contains a protease-sensitive (5 micrograms of trypsin or chymotrypsin/ml, 15 min at 2 degrees C), salt-resistant (1.0 M KCl) protein which is required to maintain import functions. In addition, functional post-translational import requires a component of the reticulocyte lysate (i.e. cytosol) that is used for initially synthesizing precursor enzyme. The component is retained by Sephadex G-25. Import of Sephadex G-25-excluded precursor is restored by fresh reticulocyte lysate but not by a combination of other additives, including Mg2+, K+, ATP, ADP, Pi, succinate, and total translation mixture (minus lysate).
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