Two distinct mechanisms drive protein translocation across the mitochondrial outer membrane in the late step of the cytochrome b2 import pathway

AUTOR(ES)
FONTE

The National Academy of Sciences

RESUMO

The import of cytochrome b2 into mitochondria consists of two steps. The translocation of the first part of the presequence across the inner membrane is coupled with the translocation of the tightly folded heme-binding domain across the outer membrane and requires a membrane potential ΔΨ and the functions of mitochondrial Hsp70 (mHsp70) in the matrix. Once the heme-binding domain has passed the outer membrane, the translocation of the rest of the polypeptide chain across the outer membrane becomes independent of ΔΨ and mHsp70. Here we analyzed the late ΔΨ- and mHsp70-independent step in the transport of cytochrome b2 fusion proteins into the intermembrane space (IMS). The import of the cytochrome b2 fusion proteins containing two protein domains linked by a spacer segment into mitochondria was arrested at a stage at which one domain folded on each side of the outer membrane, along the pathway that is consistent with the stop-transfer model. The mature-size form of the translocation intermediate could move across the outer membrane in both directions, and the stabilization of the protein domain in the IMS promoted the forward translocation. On the other hand, the intermediate-size form of the translocation intermediate, which retains the anchorage to the inner membrane, was transported into the IMS independently of the stability of the protein domain in the IMS. These results suggest that two distinct mechanisms, the Brownian ratchet and the anchor diffusion mechanisms, can operate for the transmembrane movement of the mature-size form and the intermediate-size form, respectively, of cytochrome b2 species.

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