Mft52, an acid-bristle protein in the cytosol that delivers precursor proteins to yeast mitochondria

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Abstract

We have identified a novel protein, Mft52, in the cytosol of yeast cells. Mft52 has a two-domain structure that includes a receptor-like carboxyl-terminal 'acid-bristle' domain, which binds basic, amphipathic mitochondrial targeting sequences. Native Mft52, purified from the cytosol of yeast cells, is found as a large particle eluting in the void volume of a Superose 6 gel filtration column. Fusion proteins, consisting of mitochondrial targeting sequences fused to nonmitochondrial passenger proteins, are targeted to mitochondria in wild-type yeast cells, but defects in the gene encoding Mft52 drastically reduce the delivery of these proteins to the mitochondria. We propose that Mft52 is a subunit of a particle that is part of a system of targeting factors and molecular chaperones mediating the earliest stages of protein targeting to the mitochondria.

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Cartwright, P., Beilharz, T., Hansen, P., Garrett, J., & Lithgow, T. (1997). Mft52, an acid-bristle protein in the cytosol that delivers precursor proteins to yeast mitochondria. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 272(8), 5320–5325. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.272.8.5320

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