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Transporting proteins into cells to mitochondria

Posted: 26 November 2018 | | No comments yet

J-proteins such as Xdj1, as helpers of the heat shock protein 70 chaperones, and were found to be involved in the transport of proteins to the mitochondria…

green mitochondria on a dark blue background

The research labs of Associate Professor Thomas Becker and Professor Nikolaus Pfanner teamed up with several other researchers at the University of Freiburg to discover a mechanism inside cells that transports proteins to the mitochondria. 

Mitochondria are not only responsible for many vital processes within a cell; they also produce energy for the cell’s metabolism, which is why they are referred to as the cell’s power stations. When defects occur in their biogenesis and function, this can cause serious diseases in the central nervous system or the heart.

In order to function properly, mitochondria are dependent on around 1,000 different kinds of proteins, which are imported from the cytosol, the fluid inside the cell. The ribosomes inside this fluid are the cell’s protein factories that also produce precursor forms of proteins for the mitochondria. These precursor proteins are then escorted by molecular chaperones from the ribosomes to the mitochondria. Chaperone proteins promote folding of other proteins into their three-dimensional structures. Since the cellular content of chaperones is increased upon heat stress these proteins also termed heat shock proteins (Hsps). The Hsp70 chaperone is especially important for chaperoning precursor proteins into mitochondria.

The translocases of the outer mitochondrial membrane (TOM complex) forms the entry gate for almost all mitochondrial precursor proteins. Specific receptor proteins like Tom22 and Tom70 recognise the incoming precursor proteins. How the precursors are transferred from the cytosolic chaperones to specific TOM receptors remained largely unknown.

Researchers from the collaborative research centre “Functional Specificity by Coupling and Modification of Proteins”, the research training group “Transport Across and Into Membranes”, and the cluster of excellence BIOSS Centre for Biological Signalling Studies at the University of Freiburg teamed up to study the role of J-proteins, which are helpers of the Hsp70 chaperones, in the transport of proteins to the mitochondria. The postdoc Dr Lukasz Opalinski from Thomas Becker’s research group demonstrated that the J-protein Xdj1 is involved in the transport of mitochondrial proteins.

In collaboration with the group of Professor Bettina Warscheid, he determined that Xdj1 binds to the Tom22 receptor. Thereby, Xdj1 promotes the transfer of precursory proteins from the cytosolic chaperones to the TOM complex to initiate their import into the mitochondria. The researchers also discovered that a second J-protein called Djp1 binds to the Tom70 receptor of the TOM complex, indicating that two different J-proteins associate with two distinct TOM receptors to deliver precursor proteins to the TOM complex.

Their research has now been published in the science journal Cell Reports.

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