109 research outputs found
NAF-1 and mitoNEET are central to human breast cancer proliferation by maintaining mitochondrial homeostasis and promoting tumor growth
Mitochondria are emerging as important players in the transformation
process of cells, maintaining the biosynthetic and energetic
capacities of cancer cells and serving as one of the primary sites of
apoptosis and autophagy regulation. Although several avenues of
cancer therapy have focused on mitochondria, progress in developing
mitochondria-targeting anticancer drugs nonetheless has
been slow, owing to the limited number of known mitochondrial
target proteins that link metabolism with autophagy or cell death.
Recent studies have demonstrated that two members of the newly
discovered family of NEET proteins, NAF-1 (CISD2) and mitoNEET
(mNT; CISD1), could play such a role in cancer cells. NAF-1 was
shown to be a key player in regulating autophagy, and mNT
was proposed to mediate iron and reactive oxygen homeostasis
in mitochondria. Here we show that the protein levels of NAF-1
and mNT are elevated in human epithelial breast cancer cells, and
that suppressing the level of these proteins using shRNA results in
significantly reduced cell proliferation and tumor growth, decreased
mitochondrial performance, uncontrolled accumulation
of iron and reactive oxygen in mitochondria, and activation of
autophagy. Our findings highlight NEET proteins as promising mitochondrial
targets for cancer therapy
Isolation and sequence of a tomato cDNA clone encoding subunit II of the photosystem I reaction center
We report here the isolation and nucleotide sequence of a cDNA clone encoding a phtosystem I polypeptide that is recognized by a polyclonal antibody prepared against subunit II of the photosystem I reaction center. The transit peptide processing site was determined to occur after Met 50 by N terminal sequencing. The decuced sequence of this protein predicts that the polypeptide has a net positive charge (pI=9.6) and no membrane spanning regions are evident from the hydropathy plot. Based on these considerations and the fact that subunit II is solubilized by alkali treatment of thylakoids, we concluded that subunit II is an extrinsic membrane protein. The absence of hydrophobic regions characteristic of thylakoid transfer domains furthermore implies that subunit II is localized on the stromal side of the membrane.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/43419/1/11103_2004_Article_BF00014949.pd
Engineering the Redox Potential over a Wide Range within a New Class of FeS Proteins
Abstract: MitoNEET is a newly discovered mitochondrial protein and a target of the TZD class of antidiabetes drugs. MitoNEET is homodimeric with each protomer binding a [2Fe-2S] center through a rare 3-Cys and 1-His coordination geometry. Both the fold and the coordination of the [2Fe-2S] centers suggest that it could have novel properties compared to other known [2Fe-2S] proteins. We tested the robustness of mitoNEET to mutation and the range over which the redox potential (EM) could be tuned. We found that the protein could tolerate an array of mutations that modified the EM of the [2Fe-2S] center over a range of ∼700 mV, which is the largest EM range engineered in an FeS protein and, importantly, spans the cellular redox range (+200 to-300 mV). These properties make mitoNEET potentially useful for both physiological studies and industrial applications as a stable, water-soluble, redox agent
Understanding biomolecular motion, recognition, and allostery by use of conformational ensembles
We review the role conformational ensembles can play in the analysis of biomolecular dynamics, molecular recognition, and allostery. We introduce currently available methods for generating ensembles of biomolecules and illustrate their application with relevant examples from the literature. We show how, for binding, conformational ensembles provide a way of distinguishing the competing models of induced fit and conformational selection. For allostery we review the classic models and show how conformational ensembles can play a role in unravelling the intricate pathways of communication that enable allostery to occur. Finally, we discuss the limitations of conformational ensembles and highlight some potential applications for the future
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