Litcius/Paper detail

Porins as helpers in mitochondrial protein translocation

Alexander Grevel, Thomas Becker

2020Biological Chemistry21 citationsDOI

Abstract

Mitochondria import the vast majority of their proteins via dedicated protein machineries. The translocase of the outer membrane (TOM complex) forms the main entry site for precursor proteins that are produced on cytosolic ribosomes. Subsequently, different protein sorting machineries transfer the incoming preproteins to the mitochondrial outer and inner membranes, the intermembrane space, and the matrix. In this review, we highlight the recently discovered role of porin, also termed voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC), in mitochondrial protein biogenesis. Porin forms the major channel for metabolites and ions in the outer membrane of mitochondria. Two different functions of porin in protein translocation have been reported. First, it controls the formation of the TOM complex by modulating the integration of the central receptor Tom22 into the mature translocase. Second, porin promotes the transport of carrier proteins toward the carrier translocase (TIM22 complex), which inserts these preproteins into the inner membrane. Therefore, porin acts as a coupling factor to spatially coordinate outer and inner membrane transport steps. Thus, porin links metabolite transport to protein import, which are both essential for mitochondrial function and biogenesis.

Topics & Concepts

Translocase of the outer membranePorinTranslocase of the inner membraneIntermembrane spaceTranslocaseVoltage-dependent anion channelBacterial outer membraneProtein targetingCell biologyMitochondrial carrierInner membraneMitochondrial membrane transport proteinBiologyTransport proteinATP–ADP translocaseInner mitochondrial membraneTransloconMembrane transport proteinBiochemistryMitochondrionMembrane proteinChromosomal translocationMembraneEscherichia coliGeneMitochondrial Function and PathologyATP Synthase and ATPases ResearchRNA modifications and cancer
Porins as helpers in mitochondrial protein translocation | Litcius