Mitochondria are surrounded by two membranes, the outer and inner membrane. The outer membrane contains a few dozen integral membrane proteins that mediate transport, fusion and fission processes, form contact sites and are involved in signaling pathways. There are two different types of outer membrane proteins. A few proteins are membrane-integrated by a transmembrane β-barrel, while other proteins are embedded by single or multiple α-helical membrane segments. All outer membrane proteins are produced on cytosolic ribosomes, but their import mechanisms differ. The translocase of the outer mitochondrial membrane (TOM complex) and the sorting and assembly machinery (SAM complex) import β-barrel proteins. Different import pathways have been reported for proteins with α-helical membrane anchors. The mitochondrial import (MIM) complex is the major insertase for this type of proteins. The in vitro import of radiolabeled precursor proteins into isolated mitochondria is a versatile technique to study protein import into the outer mitochondrial membrane. The import of these proteins does not involve proteolytic processing and is not dependent on the membrane potential. Therefore, the import assay has to be combined with blue native electrophoresis, carbonate extraction or protease accessibility assays to determine the import efficiency. These techniques allow to define import steps, assembly intermediates and study membrane integration. The in vitro import assay has been a central tool to uncover specific import routes and mechanisms.
Keywords: MIM complex; Mitochondria; Protein sorting; SAM complex; TOM complex.
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