In most eukaryotic organisms, cytochrome c1 is encoded in the nucleus, translated on cytosolic ribosomes, and directed to its final destination in the mitochondrial inner membrane by a bipartite, cleaved, amino-terminal presequence. However, in the kinetoplastids and euglenoids, the cytochrome c1 protein has been shown to lack a cleaved presequence; a single methionine is removed from the amino terminus upon maturation, and the sequence upstream of the heme-binding site is generally shorter than that of the other eukaryotic homologs. We have used a newly developed mitochondrial protein import assay system from Trypanosoma brucei to demonstrate that the T. brucei cytochrome c1 protein is imported along a non-conservative pathway similar to that described for the inner membrane carrier proteins of other organisms. This pathway requires external ATP and an external protein receptor but is not absolutely dependent on a membrane potential of on ATP hydrolysis in the mitochondrial matrix. We propose the cytochrome c1 import in T. brucei is a two-step process first involving a membrane potential independent translocation across the outer mitochondrial membrane followed by heme attachment and a membrane potential-dependent insertion into the inner membrane.
CITATION STYLE
Priest, J. W., & Hajduk, S. L. (2003). Trypanosoma brucei cytochrome c1 is imported into mitochondria along an unusual pathway. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 278(17), 15084–15094. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M212956200
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