Broad Distribution of TPI-GAPDH Fusion Proteins among Eukaryotes: Evidence for Glycolytic Reactions in the Mitochondrion?

  • Takuro Nakayama (110874)
  • Ken-ichiro Ishida (110878)
  • John M. Archibald (110880)
Publication date
December 2012

Abstract

<div><p>Glycolysis is a central metabolic pathway in eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells. In eukaryotes, the textbook view is that glycolysis occurs in the cytosol. However, fusion proteins comprised of two glycolytic enzymes, triosephosphate isomerase (TPI) and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), were found in members of the stramenopiles (diatoms and oomycetes) and shown to possess amino-terminal mitochondrial targeting signals. Here we show that mitochondrial TPI-GAPDH fusion protein genes are widely spread across the known diversity of stramenopiles, including non-photosynthetic species (<em>Bicosoeca</em> sp. and <em>Blastocystis hominis</em>). We also show that TPI-GAPDH fusion genes exist in three cercozoan taxa (<em>Pauli...

Extracted data

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