Subunit IV of yeast cytochrome oxidase is made in the cytoplasm with a transient pre‐sequence of 25 amino acids which is removed upon import of the protein into mitochondria. To study the function of this cleavable pre‐sequence in mitochondrial protein import, three peptides representing 15, 25 or 33 amino‐terminal residues of the subunit IV precursor were chemically synthesized. All three peptides were freely soluble in aqueous buffers, yet inserted spontaneously from an aqueous subphase into phospholipid monolayers up to an extrapolated limiting monolayer pressure of 40‐50 mN/m. The two longer peptides also caused disruption of unilamellar liposomes. This effect was increased by a diffusion potential, negative inside the liposomes, and decreased by a diffusion potential of opposite polarity. The peptides, particularly the two longer ones, also uncoupled respiratory control of isolated yeast mitochondria. The 25‐residue peptide had little secondary structure in aqueous buffer but became partly alpha‐helical in the presence of detergent micelles. Based on the amino acid sequence of the peptides, a helical structure would have a highly asymmetric distribution of charged and apolar residues and would be surface active. Amphiphilic helicity appears to be a general feature of mitochondrial pre‐sequences. We suggest that this feature plays a crucial role in transporting proteins into mitochondria.
We have shown earlier that a mitochondrial presequence peptide can form an amphiphilic helix. However, the importance of amphiphilicity for mitochondrial presequence function became doubtful when an artificial presequence, designed to be non‐amphiphilic, proved to be active as a mitochondrial import signal. We now show experimentally that this ‘non‐amphiphilic’ presequence peptide is, in fact, highly amphiphilic as measured by its ability to insert into phospholipid monolayers and to disrupt phospholipid vesicles. This result, and similar tests on three additional artificial presequences (two functionally active and one inactive), revealed that all active presequences were amphiphilic whereas the inactive presequence was non‐amphiphilic. One of the active presequence peptides was non‐helical in solution and in the presence of detergent micelles. We conclude that amphiphilicity is necessary for mitochondrial presequence function whereas a helical structure may not be essential.
The pyridoxal phosphate dependent Salmonella typhimurium dadB alanine racemase was inactivated with D- and L-beta-fluoroalanine, D- and L-beta-chloroalanine, and O-acetyl-D-serine. Enzyme inactivation with each isomer of beta-chloro[14C]alanine followed by NaBH4 reduction and trypsin digestion afforded a single radiolabeled peptide. In the same manner, NaB3H4-reduced native enzyme gave a single labeled peptide after trypsin digestion. Purification and sequencing of these three radioactive peptides revealed them to be a common, unique hexadecapeptide which contained labeled lysine at position 6 in each case. Enzyme which had been inactivated, but not reductively stabilized with NaBH4, released a labile pyridoxal phosphate-inactivator adduct on denaturation. The structure of this adduct suggests that the enzyme was inactivated by trapping the coenzyme in a ternary adduct with inactivator and the active site lysine. Under denaturing conditions, facile alpha,beta-elimination occurred, releasing the aldol adduct of pyruvate and pyridoxal phosphate. Reduction of the ternary enzyme adduct blocked this elimination pathway. The overall mechanism of racemase inactivation is discussed in light of these results.
Mechanism-based inactivators were used to probe the active site of the broad specificity amino acid racemase from Pseudomonas striata. Kinetic parameters for the inactivation of the racemase with both stereoisomers of beta-fluoroalanine, beta-chloroalanine, and O-acetylserine were determined. By use of 14C-labeled O-acetylserines, the stoichiometry of inactivator binding was found to be one inactivator bound per enzyme subunit. The PLP-dependent enzyme contains one coenzyme per subunit, and after NaB3H4 reduction of the PLP-imine bond, followed by trypsin digestion of the protein, the amino acid sequence of the PLP-binding peptide was determined. Trypsin digestion of the enzyme labeled with either L or D isomer of O-acetylserine and sequencing of the labeled peptide revealed that the inactivators bind to the same lysine residue which binds PLP in native enzyme. The characterization of a PLP adduct released from inactivated enzyme under some conditions is also described. Implications of the formation of this compound with respect to the overall reaction mechanism of inactivation are discussed.
A synthetic mitochondrial presequence has been shown to translocate across pure phospholipid bilayers. The presequence was fluorescently labeled so that its association with membranes could be monitored spectroscopically. In the presence of large unilamellar vesicles, the presequence showed time- and potential-dependent protection from reaction with added trypsin and dithionite. The protection was rapidly reversed by treatment of the vesicles with detergent. If the vesicles contained trypsin, the added presequence became sensitive to digestion by the protease. The results show that a mitochondrial presequence can translocate across phospholipid bilayers that lack a hydrophilic translocation pore.
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