1 research outputs found
The Peroxisomal Targeting Signal 3 (PTS3) of the Budding Yeast Acyl-CoA Oxidase Is a Signal Patch
The specificity of import of peroxisomal matrix proteins is dependent on the targeting
signals encoded within their amino acid sequences. Two known import signals,
peroxisomal targeting signal 1 (PTS1), positioned at the C-termini and PTS2 located
close to N-termini of these proteins are recognized by the Pex5p and Pex7p receptors,
respectively. However, in several yeast species, including Saccharomyces cerevisiae,
proteins exist that are efficiently imported into peroxisomes despite having neither PTS1
nor PTS2 and for which no other import signal has been determined. An example of such
a protein is S. cerevisiae acyl-CoA oxidase (AOx) encoded by the POX1 gene. While it is
known that its import is driven by its interaction with the N-terminal segment of Pex5p,
which is separate from its C-terminal PTS1-recognizing tetratricopeptide domain, to
date, no AOx polypeptide region has been implicated as critical for this interaction,
and thus would constitute the long-sought PTS3 signal. Using random mutagenesis
combined with a two-hybrid screen, we identified single amino acid residues within the
AOx polypeptide that are crucial for this interaction and for the peroxisomal import of
this protein. Interestingly, while scattered throughout the primary sequence, these amino
acids come close to each other within two domains of the folded AOx. Although the
role of one or both of these regions as the PTS3 signal is not finally proven, our data
indicate that the signal guiding AOx into peroxisomal matrix is not a linear sequence but
a signal patch