The N-terminal presequence from F1-ATPase β-subunit of Nicotiana plumbaginifolia efficiently targets green fluorescent fusion protein to the mitochondria in diverse commercial crops

Funct Plant Biol. 2008 Apr;35(2):166-170. doi: 10.1071/FP07277.

Abstract

Approximately 10-15% of plant nuclear genes appear to encode mitochondrial proteins that are directed to mitochondria by specific targeting signals. Reports on the heterologous function of these targeting signals are generally limited to one or a few species, with an emphasis on model plants such as tobacco and Arabidopsis. Given their sequence diversity and their insufficient testing in commercially important crops (including monocotyledonous crops), the extent to which these signals can be relied on for biotechnological purposes across species remains to be established. This study provides the experimental verification of a mitochondrial signal that is functional across diverse crop species, including five monocots (sugarcane, wheat, corn, sorghum and onion) and seven dicots (cucumber, cauliflower, tomato, capsicum, pumpkin, coriander and sunflower). In all 12 crops, transient assays following microprojectile bombardment showed that the N-terminal mitochondrial presequence from F1-ATPase β-subunit (ATPase-β) of Nicotiana plumbaginifolia Viv. targeted green fluorescent fusion protein to the mitochondria. The transient assay results in sugarcane were confirmed in stably transformed root cells. The ATPase-β signal should be a useful metabolic engineering tool for directing recombinant proteins to the mitochondrial matrix in diverse plant species of commercial interest.