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Catch me if you can! Oxidative protein trapping in the intermembrane space of mitochondria

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 176, Issue 5, Pages 559-563

Publisher

ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1083/jcb.200611060

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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 disufide 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.

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