Publication | Open Access
Targeting of Bcl-2 to the mitochondrial outer membrane by a COOH-terminal signal anchor sequence.
388
Citations
28
References
1993
Year
Signal TransductionMitochondrial FunctionBiochemistryOuter MembraneMedicineNatural SciencesMitochondrial DynamicMolecular BiologyCell DeathProgrammed Cell DeathMitochondrial Outer MembraneMembrane BiologyProtein TransportCellular BiochemistryProteomicsCell BiologyCell SignalingCellular Physiology
The protooncogene product Bcl-2 is an integral membrane protein that functions as a suppressor of programmed cell death. It contains a single predicted transmembrane segment located at its COOH terminus. Here, we show that the transmembrane domain of human Bcl-2 functions as a mitochondrial signal anchor sequence that targets and inserts the protein into the outer membrane in an Ncyto-C(in) orientation, leaving the bulk of the polypeptide facing the cytosol. Deletion of the COOH-terminal 22 amino acids of Bcl-2 abrogated protein targeting, whereas fusion of this domain to the COOH terminus of dihydrofolate reductase resulted in targeting and insertion of the hybrid protein into the outer membrane in a manner similar to that of Bcl-2. The sequence of the hydrophobic core of the Bcl-2 signal anchor is similar to the corresponding region of the NH2-terminal signal anchor of the mitochondrial outer membrane protein in yeast, Mas70p. A synthetic peptide comprising the Mas70p signal anchor sequence effectively competed for insertion of Bcl-2 into the outer membrane but had no effect on the comparatively low association that Bcl-2 makes with endoplasmic reticulum microsomes. Insertion of Bcl-2 into the mitochondrial outer membrane is mechanistically different than its association with microsomes.
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