Difference between revisions of "YGR101W"

From SGD-Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(Automated import of articles)
(Automated import of articles)
Line 18: Line 18:
 
|}
 
|}
 
<br>
 
<br>
'''Description of YGR101W:''' Mitochondrial serine protease required for the processing of various mitochondrial proteins and maintenance of mitochondrial DNA and morphology; belongs to the rhomboid-GlpG superfamily of intramembrane peptidases<ref name='S000071826'>Esser K, et al. (2002) A novel two-step mechanism for removal of a mitochondrial signal sequence involves the mAAA complex and the putative rhomboid protease Pcp1. J Mol Biol 323(5):835-43 {{SGDpaper|S000071826}} PMID 12417197</ref><ref name='S000074000'>Sesaki H, et al. (2003) Cells lacking Pcp1p/Ugo2p, a rhomboid-like protease required for Mgm1p processing, lose mtDNA and mitochondrial structure in a Dnm1p-dependent manner, but remain competent for mitochondrial fusion. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 308(2):276-83 {{SGDpaper|S000074000}} PMID 12901865</ref><ref name='S000073854'>Herlan M, et al. (2003) Processing of Mgm1 by the rhomboid-type protease Pcp1 is required for maintenance of mitochondrial morphology and of mitochondrial DNA. J Biol Chem 278(30):27781-8
+
'''Description of YGR101W:''' Mitochondrial serine protease required for the processing of various mitochondrial proteins and maintenance of mitochondrial DNA and morphology; belongs to the rhomboid-GlpG superfamily of intramembrane peptidases<ref name='S000071826'>Esser K, et al. (2002) A novel two-step mechanism for removal of a mitochondrial signal sequence involves the mAAA complex and the putative rhomboid protease Pcp1. J Mol Biol 323(5):835-43 {{SGDpaper|S000071826}} PMID 12417197</ref><ref name='S000073854'>Herlan M, et al. (2003) Processing of Mgm1 by the rhomboid-type protease Pcp1 is required for maintenance of mitochondrial morphology and of mitochondrial DNA. J Biol Chem 278(30):27781-8 {{SGDpaper|S000073854}} PMID 12707284</ref><ref name='S000074000'>Sesaki H, et al. (2003) Cells lacking Pcp1p/Ugo2p, a rhomboid-like protease required for Mgm1p processing, lose mtDNA and mitochondrial structure in a Dnm1p-dependent manner, but remain competent for mitochondrial fusion. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 308(2):276-83
{{SGDpaper|S000073854}} PMID 12707284</ref>
+
{{SGDpaper|S000074000}} PMID 12901865</ref>
 
<br>
 
<br>
 
<br>
 
<br>

Revision as of 13:05, 25 February 2010

Share your knowledge...Edit this entry! <protect>

Systematic name YGR101W
Gene name PCP1
Aliases MDM37, RBD1
Feature type ORF, Verified
Coordinates Chr VII:693367..694407
Primary SGDID S000003333


Description of YGR101W: Mitochondrial serine protease required for the processing of various mitochondrial proteins and maintenance of mitochondrial DNA and morphology; belongs to the rhomboid-GlpG superfamily of intramembrane peptidases[1][2][3]




</protect>

Community Commentary

About Community Commentary. Please share your knowledge!

Protein Details

Protein Function/Process

Limited proteolysis of Mgm1p generating the short isoform of Mgm1p depends on the mitochondrial rhomboid protease Pcp1p. Lack of Pcp1p can partially be complemented by expression of an artificial variant of the short isoform of Mgm1p. [2] [4]





<protect>

References

See Help:References on how to add references

  1. Esser K, et al. (2002) A novel two-step mechanism for removal of a mitochondrial signal sequence involves the mAAA complex and the putative rhomboid protease Pcp1. J Mol Biol 323(5):835-43 SGD PMID 12417197
  2. 2.0 2.1 Herlan M, et al. (2003) Processing of Mgm1 by the rhomboid-type protease Pcp1 is required for maintenance of mitochondrial morphology and of mitochondrial DNA. J Biol Chem 278(30):27781-8 SGD PMID 12707284
  3. Sesaki H, et al. (2003) Cells lacking Pcp1p/Ugo2p, a rhomboid-like protease required for Mgm1p processing, lose mtDNA and mitochondrial structure in a Dnm1p-dependent manner, but remain competent for mitochondrial fusion. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 308(2):276-83 SGD PMID 12901865
  4. submitted by Andreas Reichert on 2003-09-25

See Help:Categories on how to add the wiki page for this gene to a Category </protect>