3.8 Article

Som1, a third component of the yeast mitochondrial inner membrane peptidase complex that contains Imp1 and Imp2

Journal

MOLECULAR AND GENERAL GENETICS
Volume 263, Issue 3, Pages 483-491

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s004380051192

Keywords

Saccharomyces cerevisiae; mitochondria; protein export; inner membrane peptidase; ImP; SOM1

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The mitochondrial inner membrane peptidase Imp is required for proteolytic processing of the mitochondrially encoded protein Cox2, the nucleus-encoded Cyt b(2), Mcr1, and Cyt c(1), and possibly other proteins, during their transport across the mitochondrial membranes. The peptidase contains two catalytic subunits, Imp1 and Imp2. The small protein Som1 was previously shown to affect the function of Imp1? but the precise role of Som1 remained unknown. Using mutants deleted for IMP1, IMP2 and SOM1, we show here that the Som1 protein is absent in the imp1 Delta mutant, whereas the level of the Imp1 subunit of the peptidase is only slightly reduced in the som1 null mutant. The Som1 protein is not essential for proteolytic processing of Cyt b(2), while the two other known Imp1 substrates. Cox2 and Mcr1, are not processed in the absence of Semi. Proteolytic processing of Cyt c(1) by the Imp2 subunit, and of Ccp by an as yet unidentified peptidase, is not impaired in the som1 deletion mutant. By crosslinking and co-immunoprecipitation assays we demonstrate that the Imp1 and Som1 proteins physically interact. We conclude from our results that stabilisation of Som1 and correct Imp1 function is mediated by a direct interaction between the Imp1 and Som1 proteins, suggesting that Som1 represents a third subunit of the Imp peptidase complex.

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