Abstract

PXP-18 is a 14-kDa major peroxisomal protein of the yeast Candida tropicalis and a homologue of the non-specific lipid-transfer protein (nsLTP) of mammals. Mammalian nsLTP is thought to facilitate the contact of membranes, to stimulate lipid-transfer between them. If PXP-18 functions like nsLTP, it must be present on organelle membranes. Immunoelectron microscopy of C. tropicalis cells indicated that gold particles, which visualized PXP-18, localized exclusively in the matrix of peroxisomes. Subcellular fractionation followed by Western blotting revealed the association of PXP-18 with peroxisomes in C. tropicalis cells. An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay revealed that almost all the PXP-18 associated with peroxisomes was detectable after the solubilization of the organelle but not before, implying the predominance of PXP-18 inside peroxisomes. This differential assay was applied to the intracellular import of the intact and truncated PXP-18s expressed in Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells. Most of the intact PXP-18 was shown to be imported into the matrix of host-cell peroxisomes, whereas the truncated PXP-18, which lacked the C-terminal tripeptide Pro-Lys-Leu, no longer targeted peroxisomes. These results are consistent with the view that PXP-18 is the matrix protein of peroxisomes and must function in a system other than that of lipid transfer.

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