Lysine 43 Is Trimethylated in Subunit c from Bovine Mitochondrial ATP Synthase and in Storage Bodies Associated with Batten Disease
The hydrophobic membrane protein, subunit c, has been isolated from ATP synthase purified from bovine heart mitochondria. It has also been obtained from lysosomal storage bodies associated with ceroid lipofuscinosis from ovine liver and from human brain tissue of a victim of Batten disease. It is li...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 2004-05, Vol.279 (21), p.21883-21887 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The hydrophobic membrane protein, subunit c, has been isolated from ATP synthase purified from bovine heart mitochondria.
It has also been obtained from lysosomal storage bodies associated with ceroid lipofuscinosis from ovine liver and from human
brain tissue of a victim of Batten disease. It is likely that the lysosomal protein has originated from the mitochondrion.
These samples have been characterized by mass spectrometric methods. Irrespective of its source, subunit c has an intact molecular
mass of 7650 Da, 42 Da greater than the value calculated from the amino acid sequence, and the protein has been modified post-translationally.
In all three samples, the modification is associated with lysine 43, which lies in a polar loop region linking the two transmembrane
α-helices of the protein. This residue is conserved throughout vertebrate sequences. The additional mass arises from trimethylation
and not acetylation at the ϵ-N-position of the residue. These experiments show that the post-translational modification of
subunit c is not, as has been suggested, an abnormal phenomenon associated with the etiology of Batten disease and ceroid
lipofucinoses. Evidently, it occurs either before or during import of the protein into mitochondria or at a mitochondrial
location after completion of the import process. The function of the trimethyllysine residue in the assembled ATP synthase
complex is obscure. The residue and the modification are not conserved in all ATP synthases, and their role in the assembly
and (or) functioning of the enzyme appear to be confined to higher organisms. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1074/jbc.M402074200 |