The IQ-compete assay for measuring mitochondrial protein import efficiencies in living yeast cells

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Abstract

Most mitochondrial proteins are synthesized in the cytosol and imported into the organelle. Here, we describe a novel Import and de-Quenching Competition (IQ-compete) assay which monitors the import efficiency of model proteins by fluorescence in living cells. For this method, the sequence of the tobacco etch virus (TEV) protease is fused to a mitochondrial precursor and coexpressed with a cytosolic reporter which becomes fluorescent upon TEV cleavage. Thus, inefficient import of the fusion protein leads to a fluorescent signal. With the IQ-compete assay, the import efficiency of proteins can be reliably analyzed in fluorescence readers, by flow cytometry, by microscopy, and by western blotting. We are convinced that the IQ-compete assay will be a powerful strategy for many different applications. Impact statement This article describes a novel method to monitor the mitochondrial import efficiency for a given protein in living yeast cells. With this IQ-compete assay, protein import efficiencies can be quantified by fluorescent microscopy, flow cytometry, fluorescence spectrometry or western blotting.

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APA

Hoffman, Y., Egeler, A., Rödl, S., & Herrmann, J. M. (2026). The IQ-compete assay for measuring mitochondrial protein import efficiencies in living yeast cells. FEBS Letters, 600(1), 48–62. https://doi.org/10.1002/1873-3468.70206

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