4.8 Article

OM14 is a mitochondrial receptor for cytosolic ribosomes that supports co-translational import into mitochondria

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 5, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms6711

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Funding

  1. ISF [1193/09, 1096/13]
  2. Karen Siem Fellowship
  3. ERC [StG 260395]

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It is well established that import of proteins into mitochondria can occur after their complete synthesis by cytosolic ribosomes. Recently, an additional model was revived, proposing that some proteins are imported co-translationally. This model entails association of ribosomes with the mitochondrial outer membrane, shown to be mediated through the ribosomeassociated chaperone nascent chain-associated complex (NAC). However, the mitochondrial receptor of this complex is unknown. Here, we identify the Saccharomyces cerevisiae outer membrane protein OM14 as a receptor for NAC. OM14 Delta mitochondria have significantly lower amounts of associated NAC and ribosomes, and ribosomes from NAC[Delta] cells have reduced levels of associated OM14 Delta Importantly, mitochondrial import assays reveal a significant decrease in import efficiency into OM14D mitochondria, and OM14-dependent import necessitates NAC. Our results identify OM14 as the first mitochondrial receptor for ribosome- associated NAC and reveal its importance for import. These results provide a strong support for an additional, co-translational mode of import into mitochondria.

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