Abstract
During purification of the type I DNA topoisomerase from calf thymus mitochondria, two polypeptides, p78 and p63, cofractionate with the enzymatic activity (Lazarus et al., (1987) Biochemistry 26, 6195–6203). The two polypeptides are released from a mitochondrial inner membrane preparation by nonionic detergent lysis and both adsorb strongly to a single-stranded DNA agarose column. We have attempted to characterize the relationship between these two polypeptides and have found the following: (i) the mitochondrial topoisomerase is active in free (monomer) and associated (heterodimer) form; (ii) the catalytic activity resides solely in p78, as adjudged by both the covalent linkage of the enzyme to substrate DNA and the ability of the enzyme to relax supercoils; (iii) at low ionic strength the enzyme is active in monomer form with p78 alone being sufficient for activity; (iv) in high salt, the high molecular weight species is a 140-kDa heterodimer composed of one p78 and one p63; and (v) the two polypeptides are not structurally related as digestion with V 8 protease results in distinct proteolytic fragment patterns. These results suggest that p63 may have an important role in the metabolism of the mitochondrial topoisomerase.
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