(Received for publication, October 3, 1996, and in revised form, November 28, 1996)
From the Departments of Pharmacology and
§ Pediatrics, College of Medicine, University of South
Alabama, Mobile, Alabama 36688
A gene encoding the mitochondrial dicarboxylate
transport protein (DTP) has been identified for the first time from any
organism. Our strategy involved overexpression of putative
mitochondrial transporter genes, selected based on analysis of the
yeast genome, followed by purification and functional reconstitution of
the resulting protein products. The DTP gene from the yeast
Saccharomyces cerevisiae encodes a 298-residue basic
protein which, in common with other mitochondrial anion transporters of
known sequence and function, displays the mitochondrial transporter
signature motif, three homologous 100-amino acid sequence domains, and
six predicted membrane-spanning regions. The product of this gene has
been abundantly expressed in Escherichia coli where it
accumulates in inclusion bodies. Upon solubilization of the
overexpressed DTP from isolated inclusion bodies with Sarkosyl, 28 mg
of DTP was obtained per liter of E. coli culture at a
purity of 75%. The purified, overexpressed DTP was then reconstituted
in phospholipid vesicles where both its kinetic properties (i.e.
Km = 1.55 mM and Vmax = 3.0 µmol/min/mg protein) and its substrate specificity were
determined. The intraliposomal substrates malonate, malate, succinate,
and phosphate effectively supported [14C]malonate uptake,
whereas other anions tested did not. External substrate competition
studies revealed a similar specificity profile. Inhibitor studies
indicated that the reconstituted transporter was sensitive to
inhibition by n-butylmalonate,
p-chloromercuribenzoate, mersalyl, and to a lesser extent
pyridoxal 5-phosphate but was insensitive to
N-ethylmaleimide and selective inhibitors of other mitochondrial anion transporters. In combination, the above findings indicate that the identified gene encodes a mitochondrial transport protein which upon overexpression and reconstitution displays functional properties that are virtually identical to those of the
native mitochondrial dicarboxylate transport system.
In conclusion, the present investigation has resulted in identification of a gene encoding the mitochondrial DTP and thus eliminates a major impediment to molecular studies with this metabolically important transporter. Based on both structural and functional considerations, the yeast DTP is assignable to the mitochondrial carrier family. Additionally, the development of a procedure that enables the expression and isolation of large quantities of functional DTP provides the foundation for comprehensive investigations into the structure/function relationships within this transporter via site-directed mutagenesis, as well as for the initiation of crystallization trials.
The dicarboxylate transport protein (i.e. DTP)1 from mammalian mitochondria catalyzes an electroneutral exchange across the inner mitochondrial membrane of dicarboxylates (e.g. malonate, malate, succinate) for inorganic phosphate and certain sulfur-containing compounds (e.g. sulfite, sulfate, thiosulfate) (1-5). It is inhibited by substrate analogues (e.g. n-butylmalonate) (2, 3, 6) as well as by certain sulfhydryl reagents (e.g. mersalyl and pCMB but not N-ethylmaleimide) (2, 7-10). The DTP plays an important role in hepatic gluconeogenesis, urea synthesis, and sulfur metabolism (11, 12). Moreover, its function, which is elevated in type 1 diabetes (13), can be normalized with insulin therapy, thereby suggesting a role for insulin in DTP regulation (14). Yeast mitochondria also contain a DTP with properties generally similar to those observed with the higher eukaryotic transporter (15-18).
Due to its importance in intermediary metabolism, the DTP has been intensively investigated. Thus, it has been purified from both higher eukaryotic (19-22) and yeast (23) mitochondria and kinetically characterized in isolated mitochondria (1, 2, 9, 16, 17) as well as following functional reconstitution of the purified protein (22-25). Despite this progress, prior to the present investigation, no information has been available concerning the sequence of either the DTP or its gene, primarily due to the difficulty in obtaining a sufficient quantity of the purified protein. This major impediment has prevented detailed molecular studies with this carrier.
In the present paper, we report the identification of the gene encoding the yeast mitochondrial DTP. Our strategy involved overexpression of putative mitochondrial transporter genes identified from analysis of the yeast genome, followed by purification and functional reconstitution of the resulting protein products. This approach provides, for the first time from any source, information on the deduced primary structure of a mitochondrial DTP. Our results permit the assignment of the DTP to the mitochondrial carrier family based on both structural and functional considerations. Finally, these studies provide the tools (i.e. the DTP gene and abundant quantities of its purified, functional protein product) which will enable comprehensive studies into the molecular mechanism of this transporter.
The gene encoding the yeast mitochondrial DTP corresponds to the reverse complement of nucleotides 34,460-35,356 of GenBank accession number U19028. The DTP gene plus an additional 79 downstream nucleotides (i.e. nucleotides 34, 381-34, 459) was amplified from total Saccharomyces cerevisiae genomic DNA (Novagen; strain S288C) via PCR. Amplifications employed a forward primer (corresponding to nucleotides 35, 356-35, 334) that contained an engineered NdeI site and a reverse primer (corresponding to nucleotides 34, 381-34, 400) that contained an engineered BamHI site and were conducted as previously detailed (26), except that an annealing temperature of 59 °C was employed. The resulting single 1-kilobase pair amplification product was directionally cloned into pET-21a(+) plasmid DNA (Novagen) essentially as described previously (26). NovaBlue-competent cells (Novagen) were transformed with the DTP DNA construct following the manufacturer's instructions. Transformants were screened for inserts via (i) direct colony PCR and (ii) restriction digestion of plasmid DNA purified with the Wizard Plus Minipreps DNA purification system (Promega). Positive plasmids were then used to transform BL21(DE3)-competent cells (Novagen), the expression host, and transformants were screened for inserts as described above. The sequence of the cloned DTP gene was determined in its entirety as described previously (26). A consensus sequence was defined based on data obtained from both strands of the insert and indicated that the open reading frame of the DTP gene (i.e. nucleotides 34, 460-35, 356 of GenBank accession number U19028) had been amplified and subcloned with fidelity.
Bacterial overexpression, isolation of the resulting inclusion bodies, and extraction of the DTP from the inclusion bodies with 1.2% Sarkosyl were performed essentially as described previously in detail for the yeast mitochondrial citrate transport protein (26) except that the sonication time was extended (i.e. a total of 11-13 cycles of 30 s of sonication on ice followed by 30 s of cooling/cycle).
Functional Reconstitution of the Overexpressed Dicarboxylate Transport ProteinThe overexpressed, isolated DTP was reconstituted into preformed asolectin vesicles via the freeze-thaw-sonication method. Briefly, asolectin vesicles were prepared in buffer A (120 mM Hepes, 50 mM KCl, 1 mM EDTA, pH 7.4) (19). Solubilized DTP (5-15 µl; approximately 14-42 µg of protein) was added to 525 µl of asolectin vesicles, 158.5 µl of buffer A, 80-90 µl of buffer B (10 mM Tris, 0.1 mM EDTA, pH 7.0, 1 mM dithioerythritol), 97 µl of buffer C (10 mM potassium phosphate, 20 mM KCl, 1 mM EDTA, pH 7.2), 31.5 µl of 605.53 mM malate (or, where indicated, alternative intraliposomal substrate; final concentration = 20 mM) and 43 µl of 10% (v/v) Triton X-114, and then frozen in liquid nitrogen. Immediately prior to assay, a given sample was thawed, sonicated on ice, and extraliposomal substrate was removed (13). The resulting proteoliposomes were assayed for transport as described below.
Measurement of Reconstituted pCMB-sensitive Malonate UptakeTransport incubations were carried out at room temperature (i.e. 23.0 ± 0.5 °C), unless otherwise indicated, as follows. Proteoliposomes (90.2 µl) were preincubated with 10.82 µl of either 2.8 mM pCMB (control) or deionized water (experimental) for 20 s. Transport was then initiated by the addition of 9.02 µl of 20 mM [2-14C]malonate (DuPont NEN; specific radioactivity approximately 2-3 × 104 cpm/nmol; final concentration in reaction mix 1.6 mM). 1 min later, 90 µl of the reaction mix was removed and diluted with 480 µl of ice-cold buffer A containing 0.3 mM pCMB (final concentration). Aliquots (80 µl) of the diluted mixture were placed onto pre-spun Sephadex columns, and intraliposomal [14C]malonate was separated from external label (13, 19) and then quantified by liquid scintillation counting. The pCMB-sensitive malonate uptake rate was calculated by subtracting the control value from the experimental value. Finally, it is important to note that dicarboxylate exchange was quenched with pCMB, rather than n-butylmalonate because, unlike the latter, it effects a complete and irreversible inhibition. Thus, pCMB decreased the uptake of malonate into proteoliposomes to the low background level observed in the absence of protein.
The external substrate specificity studies (i.e. Table II) were carried out as described above except that transport was triggered by the addition of 12 µl of a solution containing 13.8 mM [14C]malonate plus 188.4 mM of a given competing anion (final concentration = 1.5 mM [14C]malonate + 20 mM competing anion). For each substrate mix, the pCMB-sensitive malonate uptake rate was calculated by subtracting the control value from the experimental value. These differences were compared to the pCMB-sensitive malonate transport rate observed in the absence of competing anion.
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The inhibitor studies were conducted as follows. Proteoliposomes (75.0 µl) were preincubated with 9.0 µl of either deionized water
(experimental reaction), 2.8 mM pCMB (control reaction), or
one of the inhibitors listed in Table III for 1 min. Transport was then
triggered by the addition of 7.5 µl of 3.66 mM
[14C]malonate (final concentration = 0.3 mM). 1 min later, transport was quenched by diluting 75 µl of the reaction mixture with 400 µl of ice-cold buffer A
containing 0.3 mM pCMB (final concentration). Intraliposomal radiolabeled malonate was then separated from external label and quantified as described above. Percent inhibition was calculated by 1) subtracting the control transport rate from the rate
observed in the presence of a given agent; 2) determining the ratio of
this difference to the uninhibited pCMB-sensitive malonate transport
rate; and 3) the use of the formula (1 ratio) × 100.
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The kinetic parameters of the reconstituted, overexpressed DTP were determined as follows. Proteoliposomes (75.0 µl) were tempered at 30 °C for approximately 3 min and were then preincubated with 9.0 µl of either 2.8 mM pCMB (control) or deionized water (experimental) for 30 s. Transport was subsequently triggered by the addition of 7.5 µl of various concentrations of [14C]malonate (final concentration = 0.25-2.0 mM; specific radioactivity 1.4-2.9 × 104 cpm/nmol). Following a 10-s transport reaction (i.e. initial rate), 75 µl of the reaction mix was removed and placed into 400 µl of ice-cold buffer A containing 0.3 mM pCMB (final concentration). The intraliposomal radiolabel was then separated and quantified as described above. The pCMB-sensitive transport rate was calculated by subtracting the control value from the experimental value obtained at each substrate concentration tested.
MiscellaneousSDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and protein quantification were performed as previously detailed (27) except that the samples were not precipitated prior to the electrophoretic separation.
Identification of the yeast gene encoding the mitochondrial DTP was accomplished utilizing the following strategy. BLAST and TFastA comparisons of the yeast mitochondrial citrate transporter sequence (GenBank accession number: U17503) were performed against the GenBank data base. Yeast protein sequences identified via these searches were then examined to determine whether they (i) constituted basic proteins of approximately 300 amino acids in length; (ii) contained the mitochondrial transporter signature sequence; (iii) consisted of six putative membrane-spanning domains (based on hydropathy analysis); and (iv) contained three homologous sequence domains of approximately 100 residues in length that are related to each other and to the sequence domains present in other mitochondrial transporters of known function (based on dot matrix analysis). Approximately 30 protein sequences, including six with known function, were identified based on the above parameters. Putative mitochondrial transporter sequences of unknown function were then prioritized for overexpression based upon how closely they matched all of the above criteria.
We then proceeded to overexpress and test the function of a gene product as follows. First, a given sequence was amplified by PCR, cloned into the pET-21a(+) plasmid, transformed into a bacterial expression host, and overexpressed. Second, the overexpressed protein product was solubilized from an isolated inclusion body fraction, incorporated into phospholipid vesicles, and assayed for dicarboxylate transport activity. Utilizing this approach, we attempted overexpression of seven candidate genes encoding putative mitochondrial transporters of unknown function (i.e. accession numbers: Z25485, X92441, U18530, X90518, S44213, X87371, and U19028). We achieved overexpression with five of the seven genes (i.e. X90518[GenBank] and X87371[GenBank] did not overexpress). Upon reconstitution of a given overexpressed protein in a liposomal system, only the product of U19028 displayed substantial dicarboxylate transport activity (note: S44213 displayed a very low dicarboxylate activity that was slightly over background (i.e. approximately 3% of the value obtained with U19028); the other expressed proteins did not catalyze any detectable dicarboxylate transport).
DTP overexpression is demonstrated by the SDS-PAGE profile, depicted in
Fig. 1, of sequential steps in the procedure. Lane 2 demonstrates that 2 h following induction with
isopropylthio--D-galactoside, harvested cells contained
a prominent protein band with an apparent molecular mass of 32 kDa and
that this band represents approximately 24% of total cellular protein,
based on scanning densitometric analysis. Lane 3 shows that
isolated inclusion bodies primarily contain the 32-kDa band. This
protein is then effectively solubilized with the detergent Sarkosyl
(lane 4), and its purity is approximately 75%. Lanes
5-7 indicate that immediately prior to induction, the 32-kDa band
is absent from the harvested cell, the inclusion body, and the
Sarkosyl-solubilized inclusion body fractions. In summary, the
procedure described above yields 28 mg (average of several preparations) of the 32-kDa protein band per liter of Escherichia coli culture at a purity of 75%.
Functional Characterization of the Overexpressed, Purified Yeast Dicarboxylate Transport Protein
To characterize the function of the abundantly expressed 32-kDa protein, we incorporated the Sarkosyl-solubilized inclusion body fraction (i.e. Fig. 1, lane 4) into phospholipid vesicles and measured the ability of the resulting proteoliposomes to catalyze pCMB-sensitive malonate/malate exchange (i.e. a defining reaction of the mitochondrial DTP). We observed that upon reconstitution, the Sarkosyl-solubilized inclusion body fraction catalyzed a pCMB-sensitive malonate/malate exchange with a specific activity of 879 ± 30 nmol/min/mg protein (reactions conducted at 30 °C). Importantly, incorporation into liposomes of the Sarkosyl-solubilized inclusion body fraction obtained from cells harvested immediately prior to induction, which did not contain the 32-kDa band (i.e. Fig. 1, lane 7), did not yield any detectable pCMB-sensitive malonate/malate exchange.
The kinetic properties of the reconstituted, overexpressed yeast mitochondrial DTP were determined by varying the external substrate concentration in the presence of a saturating level (i.e. 20 mM) of internal substrate. A Km of 1.55 mM and a Vmax of 3.0 µmol/min/mg protein were obtained via Lineweaver-Burk analysis (correlation coefficient = 0.994; data not shown). These values compare quite favorably with those reported for DTP purified from isolated yeast mitochondria (i.e. Km = 2 mM; Vmax = 1.5 µmol/min/mg; succinate/malate exchange) (23).
The dependence of DTP function on the presence of intraliposomal
substrate was investigated utilizing proteoliposomes loaded with
alternative counteranions. As depicted in Table I,
[14C]malonate effectively exchanged with internal
malonate, malate, succinate, and phosphate. In contrast, radiolabeled
malonate did not significantly exchange with intraliposomal
-ketoglutarate, citrate, isocitrate, phosphoenolpyruvate, pyruvate,
or ADP. Additionally, little uptake of malonate occurred with vesicles
that lacked an internal counteranion. Thus, the reconstituted,
overexpressed DTP maintains a strict requirement for the presence of
intraliposomal counteranion with a specificity that is identical to
that observed with native DTP after purification and
reconstitution in liposomes (20, 21, 23).
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The specificity of the reconstituted, overexpressed DTP for external
substrate was examined by measuring the ability of a high concentration
(i.e. 20 mM) of unlabeled potential substrate to
inhibit the [14C]malonate/malate exchange. As depicted in
Table II, malonate, malate, phosphate, and succinate
effectively inhibited radiolabeled malonate uptake, whereas
phosphoenolpyruvate, citrate, isocitrate, -ketoglutarate, pyruvate,
and ADP did not. Thus, the overexpressed DTP displays the same
specificity for external substrate as that observed with the native
transporter in both intact mitochondria (1, 9) as well as the isolated
state (19, 20, 22, 23).
The sensitivity of the DTP to a variety of inhibitors was tested. Table
III indicates that n-butylmalonate, a
specific inhibitor of the mitochondrial DTP in yeast (15-18), as well
as in higher eukaryotes (2, 3, 6), substantially inhibited
malonate/malate exchange. In contrast, phenylsuccinate,
1,2,3-benzenetricarboxylate, and -cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate, which
selectively inhibit the
-ketoglutarate (28), citrate (29), and
pyruvate (30) transporters, respectively, did not significantly inhibit
DTP function. The sulfhydryl reagents pCMB (see "Experimental
Procedures") and mersalyl caused complete inhibition, whereas DTP
function was unaffected by N-ethylmaleimide. Additionally,
the lysine-selective agent pyridoxal 5
-phosphate partially inhibited
DTP function. These findings are in complete agreement with data
obtained with the native DTP in isolated mitochondria (2, 7-10), as
well as with purified and reconstituted DTP (19-23), the sole
exception being that the overexpressed DTP is insensitive to
phenylsuccinate. It is of interest to note that Lancar-Benba et
al. (23) reported that phenylsuccinate caused a 57% inhibition of
the purified native yeast DTP. The likely reason for this variation is
the use of malonate as the transportable substrate in our studies
(based on the fact that the DTP displays a higher affinity and greater specificity for this substrate (1, 19)) rather than succinate.
The nucleotide sequence of the amplified, cloned DTP gene was determined (GenBank accession number U79459[GenBank]) and is identical to the sequence of a region of chromosome XII (GenBank accession number U19028). A detailed analysis of the deduced amino acid sequence of the overexpressed DTP was performed. The yeast mitochondrial DTP is comprised of 298 amino acids with a calculated mass of 32,991 Da. This molecular mass value is similar to the range of values (i.e. 32-35 kDa) for other mitochondrial transport proteins of known sequence from both higher and lower eukaryotes (for review see Refs. 26, 31). In common with other mitochondrial anion transport proteins, the DTP is quite basic displaying an isoelectric point of 10.5 and a net charge of +14.8 (pH 7.0). The polarity of the DTP is 40%, a value which is rather high for an integral membrane protein but which typifies the mitochondrial anion transporters (31).
As depicted in Fig. 2, dot matrix comparisons of the DTP
sequence against itself at both moderate (Fig. 2A) and high
(Fig. 2B) stringencies reveal three homologous amino acid
domains each approximately 100 residues in length. The tripartite
structure of the DTP is characteristic of all mitochondrial
transporters of known function and sequence (32-41). The 100-residue
domains of the DTP are also related to those present in other
mitochondrial transporters (data not shown). Hydropathy analysis (Fig.
2C) demonstrates that the yeast DTP contains six domains
that are of sufficient length and hydrophobicity to potentially span
the mitochondrial inner membrane as -helices. This finding is in
agreement with the observation that all of the mitochondrial anion
carriers of known sequence contain six putative membrane-spanning
domains (32-41).
Fig. 3 depicts an alignment of the DTP sequence with the
four other known yeast mitochondrial transporter sequences. Several points merit comment. First, the mitochondrial transporter signature motif
Pro-X-(Asp/Glu)-X-(Val/Ile/Ala/Met)-(Lys/Arg)-X-(Arg/Lys/Gln/Ala)-(Leu/Met/Phe/Ile), which repeats two to three times in most of the mitochondrial transporters that have been sequenced to date (32-35, 42), repeats twice within the DTP. Second, a consensus sequence has been derived that depicts 136 positions (121 of which involve the DTP) where amino
acid residues are either identical or conservatively substituted in
four of the five sequences shown. Finally, the combination of the size
of the DTP (i.e. similar to that of the phosphate (36) and
citrate (26) transporters which are thought to lack cleavable
presequences), along with the absence of arginine residues and the
presence of an acidic residue near its amino terminus, suggests that
the DTP is unlikely to contain a cleavable presequence (43, 44). In
this respect, the DTP is similar to several other mitochondrial
transporters that also do not appear to have presequences (34-36, 45,
46) and thus contain the targeting information within the sequence of
the mature protein.
A search of the Swiss-Prot and the GenBank data bases was carried out
in order to identify other sequences that may be closely related to the
DTP. The DTP sequence displayed the greatest similarity to DNA
sequences encoding a protein of unknown function from a Drosophila melanogaster library (i.e. 43.0%
identity over a 142-amino acid overlap; accession number L49195[GenBank]), the
mitochondrial -ketoglutarate carrier (e.g. the
Caenorhabditis elegans transporter displays 40.4% identity
over a 272-amino acid overlap; accession number X76114[GenBank]), and the
mitochondrial uncoupling protein (e.g. the rat uncoupling
protein displays 33.7% identity over a 279-amino acid overlap;
accession number P04633[GenBank]). Lesser, but nonetheless significant,
similarity was observed between the DTP and the yeast mitochondrial FAD
(36.5% identity over a 74-amino acid overlap; accession number
P40464[GenBank]), ADP/ATP 2 (26.8% identity over a 205-amino acid overlap;
accession number P18239[GenBank]), and phosphate (21.5% identity over a
181-amino acid overlap; accession number P23641[GenBank]) transporters.
The present investigation has resulted in the first identification of a gene encoding the mitochondrial DTP from any organism. This represents a significant advance in that it (i) defines the primary structure of this metabolically important carrier, thereby enabling both a detailed analysis of the properties of this sequence, as well as a comparison to other mitochondrial transporter sequences; (ii) overcomes the chief impediment to investigating DTP function at the molecular level; and (iii) validates our approach to identifying mitochondrial transporter genes via overexpression and functional reconstitution of their protein products. In addition, the ability to obtain abundant quantities of purified, functional transporter now enables a variety of structure/function studies which heretofore were not possible.
Our conclusion that the identified gene encodes (and the overexpressed
protein comprises) the complete mitochondrial dicarboxylate transport
system is based on several findings. First, the reconstituted DTP
maintains a strict requirement for intraliposomal counteranion and thus
catalyzes an obligatory exchange reaction (Table I). Malonate, malate,
succinate, and phosphate support this exchange, whereas
-ketoglutarate, citrate, isocitrate, phosphoenolpyruvate, pyruvate,
and ADP do not. These characteristics are identical to those observed
with the native transporter following functional reconstitution of the
purified protein (20, 21, 23). Second, the overexpressed DTP displays
the same external substrate specificity profile as the internal profile
described above, a property that is also characteristic of the native
carrier in isolated mitochondria (1, 9) and the purified transporter
(19, 20, 22, 23). Furthermore, neither
-ketoglutarate nor citrate
can serve as substrates for the reconstituted transporter. This,
coupled with the observation that certain dicarboxylates and phosphate
are excellent substrates, clearly distinguishes the overexpressed DTP
from the
-ketoglutarate and citrate transporters. Third, kinetic
analysis of the reconstituted, overexpressed DTP demonstrates the
functional competency of the overexpressed transporter and yields
Km and Vmax values that
compare quite favorably to those obtained with the purified yeast
mitochondrial DTP (23). Fourth, the overexpressed transporter can be
inhibited by n-butylmalonate (the classical inhibitor of the
native DTP (2, 3, 6, 15-18)) as well as by sulfhydryl reagents such as
pCMB and mersalyl but is insensitive to N-ethylmaleimide.
Thus, the overexpressed DTP displays an inhibitor sensitivity profile
which is quite similar to that of the native carrier. Based on the
above criteria, we conclude that the identified gene encodes the
complete dicarboxylate transport system, which has been overexpressed
in a form that retains its native functional properties.
Another significant point pertains to the evidence that the identified gene in fact encodes a mitochondrial transporter. This evidence is 2-fold. First, based on the functional criteria described above, the overexpressed protein displays properties identical to the native mitochondrial dicarboxylate transporter. Second, the structural properties of the DTP including its molecular mass and positive charge, the presence of the mitochondrial transporter amino acid signature motif and other conserved residues, its tripartite structure, and the presence of six predicted membrane-spanning segments are features in common with most of the mitochondrial anion transporters that have been sequenced to date (for review see Refs. 9, 31). Thus, based on both functional and structural considerations, the overexpressed DTP is assignable to the mitochondrial carrier family.
Several additional points regarding the strategy employed in this study should be noted. First, the fact that this approach has enabled identification of the transport functions encoded by two different yeast genes (i.e. the DTP and the mitochondrial citrate transport protein (26)) demonstrates its widespread utility in determining the functions encoded by putative mitochondrial transporter genes from the fully sequenced yeast genome and possibly from the genomes of other organisms as well. Second, since several mitochondrial transporters have now been successfully overexpressed in E. coli (26, 47-49), we believe that this approach will prove generally applicable with most of the mitochondrial anion transport proteins. Finally, the power of this strategy is further substantiated by the observation that purification of the DTP from isolated yeast mitochondria yielded 30 µg of protein (23). In contrast, overexpression results in an amount of protein that is 3 orders of magnitude greater.
In conclusion, identification of the yeast gene encoding the mitochondrial DTP, coupled with the overexpression and purification of its functional protein product, enables an array of structural studies to commence. These include the systematic and comprehensive use of site-directed mutagenesis to elucidate the structure/function relationships within the DTP, as well as the initiation of crystallization trials with this metabolically important transporter.
The nucleotide sequence(s) reported in this paper has been submitted to the GenBankTM/EMBL Data Bank with accession number(s) U79459[GenBank].
We thank Jennifer Hughes, Natalie Norwood, and Clayton Campbell for excellent assistance with the transport studies.