Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Chair of Metabolic Biochemistry
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Mitochondrial and cytosolic branched-chain amino acid transaminases from yeast, homologs of the myc oncogene-regulated Eca39 protein

J Biol Chem 271(40): 24458-64

Authors/Editors: Kispal G
Steiner H
Court DA
Rolinski B
Lill R
Publication Date: 1996
Type of Publication: Journal Article
We have isolated a high copy suppressor of a temperature-sensitive mutation in ATM1, which codes for an ABC transporter of Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondria. The suppressor, termed BAT1, encodes a protein of 393 amino acid residues with an NH2-terminal extension that directs Bat1p to the mitochondrial matrix. A highly homologous protein, Bat2p, of 376 amino acid residues was found in the cytosol. Both Bat proteins show striking similarity to the mammalian protein Eca39, which is one of the few known targets of the myc oncogene. Deletion of a single BAT gene did not impair growth of yeast cells. In contrast, deletion of both genes resulted in an auxotrophy for branched-chain amino acids (Ile, Leu, and Val) and in a severe growth reduction on glucose-containing media, even after supply of these amino acids. Mitochondria and cytosol isolated from bat1 and bat2 deletion mutants, respectively, contained largely reduced activities for the conversion of branched-chain 2-ketoacids to their corresponding amino acids. Thus, the Bat proteins represent the first known isoforms of yeast branched-chain amino acid transaminases. The severe growth defect of the double deletion mutant observed even in the presence of branched-chain amino acids suggests that the Bat proteins, in addition to the supply of these amino acids, perform another important function in the cell.

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