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Expression and Transport of <i>Candida tropicalis</i> Peroxisomal Acyl-coenzyme A Oxidase in the Yeast <i>Candida maltosa</i>
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Citations
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References
1989
Year
BiosynthesisEngineeringBiochemistryHost CellsNatural SciencesFungal Cell BiologySynthetic BiologyYeastMicrobiologyProteomicsGenes Pox2Protein BiosynthesisHost Peroxisomes
The genes POX2 and POX4, which encode the subunits (PXP-2 and PXP-4) of peroxisomal fatty acyl-coenzyme A oxidase of Candida tropicalis, were introduced into the related yeast Candida maltosa. The cells transformed with POX2 or POX4 gave much PXP-2 or PXP-4 in the purified peroxisomes. The polypeptides associated with the heterologous organelle were resistant to added protease, implying that they were transported into the peroxisomes. Genes for curtailed versions of PXP-4 were constructed in vitro and introduced into the host cells. Peptide-C, the COOH-terminal two-thirds of PXP-4, was efficiently transported into the host peroxisomes, and the polypeptide containing the NH2-terminal one-third was also, in much lesser amount. These and other results suggested that there were at least two regions of peroxisomal targeting information in PXP-4 and the primary information was internal. The deletions in Peptide-C inhibited the transport of many, but not all, of the host-cell peroxisomal polypeptides. This suggested heterogeneous transport systems on the peroxisomal membrane.
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