Fifteen years ago, we had a model of peroxisome biogenesis that involved growth and division of preexisting peroxisomes. Today, thanks to genetically tractable model organisms and Chinese hamster ovary cells, 23 PEX genes have been cloned that encode the machinery ("peroxins") required to assemble the organelle. Membrane assembly and maintenance requires three of these (peroxins 3, 16, and 19) and may occur without the import of the matrix (lumen) enzymes. Matrix protein import follows a branched pathway of soluble recycling receptors, with one branch for each class of peroxisome targeting sequence (two are well characterized), and a common trunk for all. At least one of these receptors, Pex5p, enters and exits peroxisomes as it functions. Proliferation of the organelle is regulated by Pex11p. Peroxisome biogenesis is remarkably conserved among eukaryotes. A group of fatal, inherited neuropathologies are recognized as peroxisome biogenesis diseases; the responsible genes are orthologs of yeast or Chinese hamster ovary peroxins. Future studies must address the mechanism by which folded, oligomeric enzymes enter the organelle, how the peroxisome divides, and how it segregates at cell division. Most pex mutants contain largely empty membrane "ghosts" of peroxisomes; a few mutants apparently lacking peroxisomes entirely have led some to propose the de novo formation of the organelle. However, there is evidence for residual peroxisome membrane vesicles ("protoperoxisomes") in some of these, and the preponderance of data supports the continuity of the peroxisome compartment in space and time and between generations of cells.
Abstract.We have previously shown that in some patients with primary hyperoxaluria type 1 (PH1), disease is associated with mistargeting of the normally peroxisomal enzyme alanine/glyoxylate aminotransferase (AGT) to mitochondria (Danpure, C. J., P. J. Cooper, P. J. Wise, and P. R. Jennings. J. Cell Biol. 108:1345-1352. We have synthesized, amplified, cloned, and sequenced AGT eDNA from a PHI patient with mitochondrial AGT (mAGT). This identified three point mutations that cause amino acid substitutions in the predicted AGT protein sequence. Using PCR and allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization, a range of PHI patients and controls were screened for these mutations. This revealed that all eight PHI patients with mAGT carded at least one allelewith the same three mutations. Two were homozygous for this allele and six were heterozygous. In at least three of the heterozygotes, it appeared that only the mutant allele was expressed. All three mutations were absent from PH1 patients lacking mAGT. One mutation encoding a Gly~Arg substitution at residue 170 was not found in any of the control individuals. However, the other two mutations, encoding Pro~Leu and Ile~Met substitutions at residues 11 and 340, respectively, cosegregated in the normal population at an allelic frequency of 5-10%. In an individual homozygous for this allele (substitutions at residues 11 and 340) only a small proportion of AGT appeared to be rerouted to mitochondria. It is suggested that the substitution at residue 11 generates an amphiphilic alpha-helix with characteristics similar to recognized mitochondrial targeting sequences, the full functional expression of which is dependent upon coexpression of the substitution at residue 170, which may induce defective peroxisomal import.
The rhizomelic form of chondrodysplasia punctata (RCDP) is an autosomal recessive disease of peroxisome biogenesis characterized by deficiencies in several peroxisomal proteins, including the peroxisomal enzymes of plasmalogen biosynthesis and peroxisomal 3-ketoacyl thiolase. In cultured fibroblasts from patients with this disorder, both the peroxisomal targeting and proteolytic removal of the amino-terminal type 2 peroxisomal targeting sequence (PTS2) of thiolase are defective, whereas the biogenesis of proteins targeted by carboxyterminal type 1 peroxisomal targeting sequences (PTS1) is unimpaired. We have previously isolated a Saccharomyces cerevisiae peroxisomal biogenesis mutant, pex7 (formerly peb1/pas7), which demonstrates a striking similarity to the cellular phenotype of RCDP fibroblasts in that PTS1 targeting is functional, but the peroxisomal packaging of PTS2 targeted thiolase is lacking. Complementation of this mutant has led to the identification of the protein ScPex7p, a PTS2 receptor. In this paper we report cloning of the human orthologue of ScPEX7, and demonstrate that this is the defective gene in RCDP. We show that expression of human PEX7 in RCDP cells rescues PTS2 targeting and restores some activity of dihydroxyacetone phosphate acyltransferase (DHAP-AT), a peroxisomal enzyme of plasmalogen biosynthesis, and we identify the mutations responsible for loss of function of PEX7 in a compound heterozygote RCDP patient. These results imply that several peroxisomal proteins are targeted by PTS2 signals and that the various biochemical and clinical defects in RCDP result from a defect in the receptor for this class of PTS.
Abstract. We have identified a novel peroxisomal targeting sequence (PTS) at the extreme COOH terminus of human catalase. The last four amino acids of this protein (-KANL) are necessary and sufficient to effect targeting to peroxisomes in both human fibroblasts and Saccharomyces cerevisiae, when appended to the COOH terminus of the reporter protein, chloramphenicol acetyl transferase. However, this PTS differs from the extensive family of COOH-terminal PTS tripeptides collectively termed PTS1 in two major aspects. First, the presence of the uncharged amino acid, asparagine, at the penultimate residue of the human catalase PTS is highly unusual, in that a basic residue at this position has been previously found to be a common and critical feature of PTS1 signals. Nonetheless, this asparagine residue appears to constitute an important component of the catalase PTS, in that replacement with aspartate abolished peroxisomal targeting (as did deletion of the COOH-terminal four residues). Second, the human catalase PTS comprises more than the COOH-terminal three amino acids, in that COOH-terminal -ANL cannot functionally replace the PTS1 signal -SKL in targeting a chloramphenicol acetyl transferase fusion protein to peroxisomes. The critical nature of the fourth residue from the COOH terminus of the catalase PTS (lysine) is emphasized by the fact that substitution of this residue with a variety of other amino acids abolished or reduced peroxisomal targeting. Targeting was not reduced when this lysine was replaced with arginine, suggesting that a basic amino acid at this position is required for maximal functional activity of this PTS. In spite of these unusual features, human catalase is sorted by the PTS1 pathway, both in yeast and human cells. Disruption of the PASIO gene encoding the S. cerevisiae PTS1 receptor resulted in a cytosolic location of chloramphenicol acetyl transferase appended with the human catalase PTS, as did expression of this protein in cells from a neonatal adrenoleukodystrophy patient specifically defective in PTS1 import. Furthermore, through the use of the two-hybrid system, it was demonstrated that both the PASIO gene product (Pasl0p) and the human PTS1 receptor can interact with the COOH-terminal region of human catalase, but that ithis interaction is abolished by substitutions at the penultimate residue (asparagine-toaspartate) and at the fourth residue from the COOH terminus (lysine-to-glycine) which abolish PTS functionality. We have found no evidence of additional targeting information elsewhere in the human catalase protein. An internal tripeptide (-SHL-, which conforms to the mammalian PTS1 consensus) located nine to eleven residues from the COOH terminus has been excluded as a functional PTS. Additionally, in contrast to the situation for S. cerevisiae catalase A, which contains an internal PTS in addition to a COOH-terminal PTS1, human catalase lacks such a redundant PTS, as evidenced by the exclusive cytosolic location of human catalase mutat+d in the COOH-terminal PTS. Consistent wi...
Pex7p is the soluble receptor responsible for importing into peroxisomes newly synthesized proteins bearing a type 2 peroxisomal targeting sequence. We observe that appending GFP to Pex7p's COOH terminus shifts Pex7p's intracellular distribution from predominantly cytosolic to predominantly peroxisomal in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Cleavage of the link between Pex7p and GFP within peroxisomes liberates GFP, which remains inside the organelle, and Pex7p, which exits to the cytosol. The reexported Pex7p is functional, resulting in import of thiolase into peroxisomes and improved growth of the yeast on oleic acid. These results support the “extended shuttle” model of peroxisome import receptor function and open the way to future studies of receptor export.
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