| Literature DB >> 17312024 |
Johannes M Herrmann1, Roman Köhl.
Abstract
The intermembrane space (IMS) of mitochondria, the compartment that phylogenetically originated from the periplasm of bacteria, contains machinery to catalyze the oxidative folding of proteins (Mesecke, N., N. Terziyska, C. Kozany, F. Baumann, W. Neupert, K. Hell, and J.M. Herrmann. 2005. Cell. 121:1059-1069; Rissler, M., N. Wiedemann, S. Pfannschmidt, K. Gabriel, B. Guiard, N. Pfanner, and A. Chacinska. 2005. J. Mol. Biol. 353: 485-492; Tokatlidis, K. 2005. Cell. 121:965-96). This machinery introduces disulfide bonds into newly imported precursor proteins, thereby locking them in a folded conformation. Because folded proteins cannot traverse the translocase of the outer membrane, this stably traps the proteins in the mitochondria. The principle of protein oxidation in the IMS presumably has been conserved from the bacterial periplasm and has been adapted during evolution to drive the vectorial translocation of proteins from the cytosol into the mitochondria.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17312024 PMCID: PMC2064014 DOI: 10.1083/jcb.200611060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Biol ISSN: 0021-9525 Impact factor: 10.539
Proteins for which disulfide bonds in the IMS have been reported
| Protein | Motif | Function | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| CCS | Other | Copper chaperone for Sod1 |
|
| Cox11 | Other | Assembly factor for complex IV |
|
| Cox12 | Other | Subunit of complex IV |
|
| Cox17 | Twin Cx9C | Copper chaperone |
|
| Cox19 | Twin Cx9C | Assembly factor for complex IV |
|
| Cox23 | Twin Cx9C | Assembly factor for complex IV |
|
| Erv1 | Other | Sulfhydryl oxidase |
|
| Mia40 | Twin Cx9C | Redox-mediated receptor |
|
| Rieske | Other | Subunit of complex III |
|
| Qcr6 | Other | Subunit of complex III |
|
| Tim8 | Twin Cx3C | Protein import component |
|
| Tim9 | Twin Cx3C | Protein import component |
|
| Tim10 | Twin Cx3C | Protein import component |
|
| Tim13 | Twin Cx3C | Protein import component |
|
| Sco1 | Other | Assembly factor for complex IV |
|
| Sod1 | Other | Superoxide dismutase |
|
Figure 1.Model of the Erv1–Mia40 disulfide relay. Schematic representation of the reactions that mediate redox-driven protein import into the IMS of mitochondria. The sulfhydryl oxidase Erv1 is a dimeric FAD-binding protein that maintains an oxidized state by the use of molecular oxygen as a final electron acceptor. Erv1 directly interacts with Mia40, which functions as a redox-activated import receptor. The oxidized active state of Mia40 can interact with newly imported precursor proteins by intermolecular disulfide bonds. It has been proposed that reshuffling of the disulfide bonds releases the substrates from Mia40 in a stably folded oxidized state. Because these folded proteins cannot traverse the protein-conducting channel of the TOM complex, they remain trapped in the IMS. Alternatively, Erv1 might directly interact with some incoming substrates and pass them on to Mia40, which might function as a protein disulfide isomerase. In both cases, the Erv1–Mia40 system constitutes a folding trap that is designed to mediate the unidirectional import of proteins into the IMS of mitochondria. Reduced and oxidized thiol groups are indicated by SH and SS, respectively.