4.5 Article

The role of mitochondria and the CIA machinery in the maturation of cytosolic and nuclear iron-sulfur proteins

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 94, Issue 7-9, Pages 280-291

Publisher

ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejcb.2015.05.002

Keywords

Membrane transport; ABC transporter; Atm1-ABCB7; Iron-sulfur cluster; Iron storage disease; Glutathione; Glutaredoxin; Cysteine desulfurase; Frataxin

Categories

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [SFB 593, TP A1, LI 415-5]
  2. von Behring-Rontgen Stiftung, LOEWE program of state Hessen [SFB 987, SPP 1710, GRK 1216]
  3. Max-Planck Gesellschaft

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q1Mitochondria have been derived from alpha-bacterial endosymbionts during the evolution of eukaryotes. Numerous bacterial functions have been maintained inside the organelles including fatty acid degradation, citric acid cycle, oxidative phosphorylation, and the synthesis of heme or lipoic acid cofactors. Additionally, mitochondria have inherited the bacterial iron-sulfur cluster assembly (ISC) machinery. Many of the ISC components are essential for cell viability because they generate a still unknown, sulfur-containing compound for the assembly of cytosolic and nuclear Fe/S proteins that perform important functions in, e.g., protein translation, DNA synthesis and repair, and chromosome segregation. The sulfur-containing compound is exported by the mitochondrial ABC transporter Atm1 (human ABCB7) and utilized by components of the cytosolic iron-sulfur protein assembly (CIA) machinery. An appealing minimal model for the striking compartmentation of eukaryotic Fe/S protein biogenesis is provided by organisms that contain mitosomes instead of mitochondria. Mitosomes have been derived from mitochondria by reductive evolution, during which they have lost virtually all classical mitochondrial tasks. Nevertheless, mitosomes harbor all core ISC components which presumably have been maintained for assisting the maturation of cytosolic-nuclear Fe/S proteins. The current review is centered around the Atml export process. We present an overview on the mitochondrial requirements for the export reaction, summarize recent insights into the 3D structure and potential mechanism of Atml, and explain how the CIA machinery uses the mitochondrial export product for the assembly of cytosolic and nuclear Fe/S proteins. (C) 2015 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.

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