15 research outputs found

    Possible import routes of proteins into the cyanobacterial endosymbionts/plastids of Paulinella chromatophora

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    The rhizarian amoeba Paulinella chromatophora harbors two photosynthetically active and deeply integrated cyanobacterial endosymbionts acquired ~60 million years ago. Recent genomic analyses of P. chromatophora have revealed the loss of many essential genes from the endosymbiont’s genome, and have identified more than 30 genes that have been transferred to the host cell’s nucleus through endosymbiotic gene transfer (EGT). This indicates that, similar to classical primary plastids, Paulinella endosymbionts have evolved a transport system to import their nuclear-encoded proteins. To deduce how these proteins are transported, we searched for potential targeting signals in genes for 10 EGT-derived proteins. Our analyses indicate that five proteins carry potential signal peptides, implying they are targeted via the host endomembrane system. One sequence encodes a mitochondrial-like transit peptide, which suggests an import pathway involving a channel protein residing in the outer membrane of the endosymbiont. No N-terminal targeting signals were identified in the four other genes, but their encoded proteins could utilize non-classical targeting signals contained internally or in C-terminal regions. Several amino acids more often found in the Paulinella EGT-derived proteins than in their ancestral set (proteins still encoded in the endosymbiont genome) could constitute such signals. Characteristic features of the EGT-derived proteins are low molecular weight and nearly neutral charge, which both could be adaptations to enhance passage through the peptidoglycan wall present in the intermembrane space of the endosymbiont’s envelope. Our results suggest that Paulinella endosymbionts/plastids have evolved several different import routes, as has been shown in classical primary plastids

    Common players in mitochondria biogenesis and neuronal protection against stress-induced apoptosis

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    Mitochondria biogenesis is a fundamental process for the organization and normal function of all cells. Since the majority of mitochondrial proteins are synthesized in the cytosol, protein import is the major mechanism for mitochondria biogenesis. We describe the different pathways that ensure correct targeting and intra mitochondrial sorting of mitochondrial proteins. The import process of several proteins of the mitochondrial intermembrane space relies on the Mitochondrial Import and Assembly 40 and Essential for respiration and vegetative growth 1 (Erv1) proteins that together constitute the oxidative folding machinery of the mitochondrial intermembrane space. Recent work has implicated the FAD-oxidase protein Erv1 (ad its human homolog Augmenter of Liver Regeneration) as an anti-apoptotic factor in mammalian cells (including neuronal cells) that undergo Reactive Oxygen Species-triggered apoptosis. The different roles of this protein as a key factor in mitochondria biogenesis, iron-sulfur cluster biogenesis and in neuronal protection against apoptosis are discussed
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