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Devi 2
Mechanisms of Protein Import, Nuclear Transport, Mitochondrial Transport
38
Biochemistry
Graduate
10/04/2010

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Term
What are the three mechanisms by which membrane enclosed organelles import proteins?
Definition
Gated transport, post-translational protein translocation, co-translational protein translocation
Term
What is gated transport?
Definition
There are nuclear pores which function as gates. This is active transport. Proteins are fully folded when they enter a gate.
Term
Talk about post-translational protein translocation
Definition
There are membrane bound translocators which transport proteins across the membrane to a topologically distinct space. Translocators usually require the protein to unfold to snake through. This is how proteins get into the mitochondria and peroxisomes.
Term
Talk about co-translational protein translocation.
Definition
There is a signal sequence of hydrophobic amino acids that signals a growing polypeptide to be bound to a signal recognition particle (SRP). The SRP consists of 6 proteins and 1 RNA. When the SRP is bound, translation halts and the ribosome, protein, SRP complex moves to the ER. There is a translocon protein (a port) in the ER membrane along with an SRP receptor. The translocon accepts the protein and the SRP binds its receptor and then dissociates. The growing protein snakes through the translocon into the ER as it elongates. Within the ER, the ER signal is cleaved by signal peptidase. The protein then will fold normally inside the ER.
Term
For co-translational protein translocation, why would you want these proteins to get to the ER during translation?
Definition
These proteins end up in vesicles and get ferried to other intra/extracellular compartments when the vesicles fuse with those compartments.
Term
How do proteins get to the nucleus?
Definition
There is a Nuclear Localization Signal (NLS) which is a string of 4-8 positively charged amino acid residues. This signal gets recognized by a cytosolic nuclear transport receptor which then transports the cargo through the nuclear pore.
Term
What happens to proteins that don't have a signal sequence?
Definition
They are destined to stay in the cytoplasm forever.
Term
Are nuclear pore complexes uni-directional, bi-directional, or something else?
Definition
Nuclear pore complexes are bi-directional. proteins can come in or out.
Term
Where are ribosomes made?
Definition
The nucleolus and the cytoplasm. This is referred to as ribosome "biogenesis"
Term
What is special about the nucleus' membrane?
Definition
It is called the nuclear envelope. It has 2 lipid bilayers!!!! It has big nuclear pores which can accomodate folded post-translational proteins.
Term
Do proteins enter the nucleus by diffusion or active transport?
Definition
Some enter by diffusion (small ones) and others are actively transported.
Term
Why would the nucleus allow free diffusion and the mitochondria not?
Definition
The nucleus doesn't need to have a different charge/potential than the cytoplasm, however the mitochondria does for oxidative phosphorylation and etc.
Term
Can anything diffuse into the nucleus?
Definition
Not exactly. There is some evidence that the nuclear pores have some sort of mesh that does filter things a little bit.
Term
What recognizes the NLS?
Definition
Importin (a nuclear importing protein) floats around the cytoplasm and recognizes NLS and binds it.
Term
How does importin get the NLS-protein into the nucleus?
Definition
Importin binds something in the nuclear pore complex (fibrils?) that gets it into the nucleus.
Term
How is importin then removed from the NLS-protein?
Definition
Ran-GTP does this in the nucleus. It binds to importin, and then NLS-protein gets released from the importin-Ran-GTP complex.
Term
How does importin rid itself of Ran-GTP after the NLS-protein is released?
Definition
Ran-GTP-importin is exported from the nucleus, and as it is exiting the nuclear pore, there is a GAP that hydrolyzes the GTP to GDP, which causes the importin to be released from the Ran-GDP.
Term
How is nuclear Ran-GTP replenished?
Definition
There is an import protein for Ran-GDP in the cytoplasm which takes Ran-GDP into the nucleus. Then, there is a GEF which exchanges the GDP for GTP, so Ran-GTP is then ready to kick some proteins off of importins. yeah baby.
Term
Are NLS's cleaved?
Definition
NO THEY ARE NOT SIR
Term
What type of charge does the NLS have?
Definition
POSITIVE
Term
What is unique about the mitochondrion that poses a challenge for importing proteins?
Definition
It is a double membrane system plus a matrix. So you might need to tag things for either of the membranes, or the intermembrane space, or the matrix.
Term
Talk about the mitochondrial outer membrane. What does it have? What does this mean for the intermembrane space?
Definition
Mitochondrion outer membrane is permeable to small molecules and proteins because it has porins (which are channels). The intermembrane space thus has a similar composition to the cytoplasm.
Term
Talk about the mito inner membrane. What does it have?
Definition
The inner membrane is impermeable to most ions and small molecules. This is important for maintaining the proton gradient required for oxidative phosphorylation (ATP generation), which occurs in the inner membrane. The inner membrane contains a huge amount of proteins.
Term
What does the mitochondrial matrix have?
Definition
It has the mitochondrial DNA as well as enzymes for the krebs cycle, which occurs there.
Term
Where are most mitochondrial proteins synthesized and by what?
Definition
In the cytosol on free ribosomes
Term
How many membranes must proteins targeted to the mitochondrial matrix cross?
Definition
2
Term
What are the two mitochrondial transport protein complexes?
Definition
TOM and TIM. (Translocase of the outer membrane, and translocase of the inner membrane.)
Term
How are mitochondrial proteins imported?
Definition
in unfolded form. There is a mitochondrial signal sequence recognized by a receptor in the outer mitochondrial membrane. The complex of receptor and protein diffuses laterally until the protein is at the right spot to go through the translocator (TOM). If the protein is destined for the inner membrane or the matrix, the protein will then also go through TIM. Then the mitochondrial signal sequence is cleaved by signal peptidase.
Term
Are mitochondrial signal sequences preserved?
Definition
NO THEY ARE CUT OFF
Term
How would a mitochondrial protein be targeted to different regions in the mitochondria?
Definition
Signaling sequences would be slightly altered.
Term
Are proteins going into the mitochondria fully translated?
Definition
Yes, they are completed translated, but get unfolded via translocation. So this is post-translational translocation.
Term
What in the mitochondrion helps to make sure proteins fold properly, considering they get unfolded during translocation?
Definition
The mitochondria has its own HSPs.
Term
Are peroxisomal signal sequences cleaved?
Definition
NO
Term
What are peroxisomes? What do they have? What do they do?
Definition
They are single membrane small organelles. They have enzymes for oxidative reactions (catalases) which break down certain substrates such as fatty acids, uric acid, amino acids, and methanol.
Term
What are peroxisomal proteins called?
Definition
Peroxins
Term
How are peroxins imported into peroxisomes?
Definition
There is a simple 3AA target sequence that binds a receptor. The rest is unknown, except that the 3AA target sequence is not cleaved.
Term
Where are peroxins made?
Definition
On free cytosolic ribosomes.
Term
Are proteins going to peroxisomes fully folded? Is transport to the peroxisome post-translational?
Definition
Transport to the peroxisome is post-translational, but the proteins are not fully-folded.
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