peripheral receptor
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2021 ◽  
pp. mbc.E21-01-0042
Author(s):  
Maniraj Bhagawati ◽  
Tasnim Arroum ◽  
Niklas Webeling ◽  
Ayelén González Montoro ◽  
Henning D. Mootz ◽  
...  

The outer membrane translocase (TOM) is the import channel for nuclear-encoded mitochondrial proteins. The general import pore contains Tom40, Tom22, Tom5, Tom6 and Tom7. Precursor proteins are bound by the peripheral receptor proteins Tom20, Tom22 and Tom70 before being imported by the TOM complex. Here we investigated the association of the receptor Tom20 with the TOM complex. Tom20 was found in the TOM complex, but not in a smaller subcomplex. In addition, a subcomplex was found without Tom40 and Tom7 but with Tom20. Using single particle tracking of labeled Tom20 in overexpressing human cells, we show that Tom20 has, on average, higher lateral mobility in the membrane than Tom7/TOM. After ligation of Tom20 with the TOM complex by post-tranlational protein trans-splicing using the trackless, ultra-fast cleaved Gp41-1 integrin system, a significant decrease in the mean diffusion coefficient of Tom20 was observed in the resulting Tom20-Tom7 fusion protein. Exposure of Tom20 to high substrate loading also resulted in reduced mobility. Taken together, our data show that the receptor subunit Tom20 interacts dynamically with the TOM core complex. We suggest that the TOM complex containing Tom20 is the active import pore and that Tom20 is associated when substrate is available.


2008 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 151-158 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Furudono ◽  
Y. Sone ◽  
K. Takizawa ◽  
J. Hirono ◽  
T. Sato

2005 ◽  
Vol 79 (3) ◽  
pp. 1678-1685 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Wallin ◽  
Maria Ekström ◽  
Henrik Garoff

ABSTRACT The membrane fusion function of murine leukemia virus (MLV) is carried by the Env protein. This protein is composed of three SU-TM subunit complexes. The fusion activity is loaded into the transmembrane TM subunit and controlled by the peripheral, receptor-binding SU subunit. It is assumed that TM adopts a metastable conformation in the native Env and that fusion activation involves the folding of TM into a stable form. Activation is suppressed by the associated SU and triggered by its dissociation, which follows receptor binding. Recently we showed that the two subunits are disulfide linked and that SU dissociation and triggering of the fusion function are caused by a switch of the intersubunit disulfide into an intrasubunit disulfide isomer using an isomerization-active CWLC motif in SU (M. Wallin, M. Ekstrom, and H. Garoff, EMBO J. 23:54-65, 2004). In the present work we address how the SU disulfide isomerase is activated. Using Moloney MLV, we show that isomerization of the SU-TM disulfide bond can be triggered by heat, urea, or guanidinium hydrochloride. Such protein perturbation treatments also significantly increase the kinetics and efficiency of viral fusion. The threshold conditions for the effects on isomerization and fusion are virtually the same. This finding indicates that destabilization of interactions in the SU oligomer induces the disulfide bond isomerase and the subsequent activation of the fusion function in TM.


2001 ◽  
Vol 172 (1) ◽  
pp. 128-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
Britto P. Nathan ◽  
Rafia Nisar ◽  
Shari Randall ◽  
Jody Short ◽  
Michael Sherrow ◽  
...  

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