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The Biogenesis Process of VDAC – From Early Cytosolic Events to Its Final Membrane Integration

Anasuya Moitra, Doron Rapaport

2021Frontiers in Physiology13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Voltage dependent anion-selective channel (VDAC) is the most abundant protein in the mitochondrial outer membrane. It is a membrane embedded β-barrel protein composed of 19 mostly anti-parallel β-strands that form a hydrophilic pore. Similar to the vast majority of mitochondrial proteins, VDAC is encoded by nuclear DNA, and synthesized on cytosolic ribosomes. The protein is then targeted to the mitochondria while being maintained in an import competent conformation by specific cytosolic factors. Recent studies, using yeast cells as a model system, have unearthed the long searched for mitochondrial targeting signal for VDAC and the role of cytosolic chaperones and mitochondrial import machineries in its proper biogenesis. In this review, we summarize our current knowledge regarding the early cytosolic stages of the biogenesis of VDAC molecules, the specific targeting of VDAC to the mitochondrial surface, and the subsequent integration of VDAC into the mitochondrial outer membrane by the TOM and TOB/SAM complexes.

Topics & Concepts

Voltage-dependent anion channelCytosolBacterial outer membraneCell biologyBiogenesisMitochondrionInner mitochondrial membraneTranslocase of the outer membraneBiologyBiochemistryChemistryMitochondrial membrane transport proteinGeneEscherichia coliEnzymeMitochondrial Function and PathologyATP Synthase and ATPases ResearchRNA and protein synthesis mechanisms