A yeast mitochondrial presequence functions as a signal for targeting to plant mitochondria in vivo.

1989 
To date, the presequence of the mitochondrial beta-subunit of ATPase from tobacco is the only signal sequence that has been shown to target a foreign protein into plant mitochondria in vivo. Here we report that the presequence of a yeast mitochondrial protein directs bacterial beta-glucuronidase (GUS) specifically into the mitochondrial compartment of transgenic tobacco plants. Fusions between the presequence of the mitochondrial tryptophanyl-tRNA-synthetase gene from yeast and the GUS gene have been introduced into tobacco plants and yeast cells. In both systems, proteins containing the complete yeast mitochondrial presequence are efficiently imported in the mitochondria. Measurements of GUS activity in different subcellular fractions indicate that there is no substantial misrouting of the chimeric proteins in plant cells. In vitro synthesized GUS fusion proteins have a higher molecular weight than those found inside yeast and tobacco mitochondria, suggesting a processing of the precursors during import. Interestingly, fusion proteins translocated across the mitochondrial membranes of tobacco have the same size as those that are imported into yeast mitochondria. We conclude that the processing enzyme in plant mitochondria may recognize a proximate or even the same cleavage site within the mitochondrial tryptophanyl-tRNA-synthetase presequence as the matrix protease from yeast.
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