| Literature DB >> 6211019 |
S Grisolía, J Timoneda, J Hernández-Yago, J Soler, M D De Arriaga, R Wallace.
Abstract
Quantitation of the pool of short-lived mitochondrial proteins in cultured cells by a new method shows it to be very low, i.e. approximately 1.35%. Degradation of three long-lived mitochondrial enzymes of rat liver which make up approximately 25-30% of the mitochondrial protein necessitates the cooperation of mitochondrial and lysosomal components. The degradation of carbamyl phosphate synthetase (t1/2, 7.7 d) and of ATPase (t1/2, 2-3 d) requires both a protein component from the inner mitochondrial membrane and lysosomes while degradation of glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) (t1/2, approximately 1 d) necessitates a mitoplast factor, identified as NADP, which facilitates the inactivation by lysosomes. Chemotropic modification (carbamylation) of GDH also changes stability to rat liver proteases. All three enzymes are synthesized as pro-enzymes. Their processing and possibly control of degradation by maturases as well as the relation of both processes to molecular plasticity is presented.Entities:
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Year: 1981 PMID: 6211019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Biol Med Ger ISSN: 0001-5318