
doi: 10.1007/bf00786928
pmid: 2092036
Most polypeptides of mitochondria are imported from the cytosol. Precursor proteins contain targeting and sorting information, often in the form of amino-terminal presequences. Precursors first bind to receptors in the outer membrane. Two putative import receptors have been identified: a 19-kilodalton protein (MOM19) in Neurospora mitochondria, and a 70-kilodalton protein (MAS70) in yeast. Some precursors integrate directly into the outer membrane, but the majority are translocated through one or both membranes. This process requires an electrochemical potential across the inner membrane. Import appears to occur through a hydrophilic pore, although the inner and outer membranes may contain functionally separate translocation machineries. In yeast, a 42-kilodalton protein (ISP42) probably forms part of the outer membrane channel. After import, precursors interact with "chaperonin" ATPases in the matrix. Presequences then are removed by the matrix protease. Finally, some proteins are retranslocated across the inner membrane to the intermembrane space.
Proteins, Biological Transport, Intracellular Membranes, Membrane Potentials, Mitochondria, Fungal Proteins, Neurospora, Yeasts, Animals, Protein Precursors, Protein Processing, Post-Translational
Proteins, Biological Transport, Intracellular Membranes, Membrane Potentials, Mitochondria, Fungal Proteins, Neurospora, Yeasts, Animals, Protein Precursors, Protein Processing, Post-Translational
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