21 results on '"Debkumar Pain"'
Search Results
2. Splitting the functions of Rim2, a mitochondrial iron/pyrimidine carrier
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Jayashree Pain, Ashutosh K. Pandey, Heeyong Yoon, Simon A.B. Knight, Debkumar Pain, and Andrew Dancis
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0301 basic medicine ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins ,Hemeprotein ,Pyrimidine ,Iron ,Mutation, Missense ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Mitochondrion ,Aconitase ,Article ,Mitochondrial Proteins ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pyrimidine nucleotide transport ,Molecular Biology ,Heme ,biology ,Chemistry ,Cytochrome c ,Cell Biology ,Mitochondrial carrier ,Pyrimidines ,030104 developmental biology ,Amino Acid Substitution ,Biochemistry ,Nucleotide Transport Proteins ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Rim2 is an unusual mitochondrial carrier protein capable of transporting both iron and pyrimidine nucleotides. Here we characterize two point mutations generated in the predicted substrate-binding site, finding that they yield disparate effects on iron and pyrimidine transport. The Rim2 (E248A) mutant was deficient in mitochondrial iron transport activity. By contrast, the Rim2 (K299A) mutant specifically abrogated pyrimidine nucleotide transport and exchange, while leaving iron transport activity largely unaffected. Strikingly, E248A preserved TTP/TTP homoexchange but interfered with TTP/TMP heteroexchange, perhaps because proton coupling was dependent on the E248 acidic residue. Rim2-dependent iron transport was unaffected by pyrimidine nucleotides. Rim2-dependent pyrimidine transport was competed by Zn2+ but not by Fe2+, Fe3+ or Cu2+. The iron and pyrimidine nucleotide transport processes displayed different salt requirements; pyrimidine transport was dependent on the salt content of the buffer whereas iron transport was salt independent. In mitochondria containing Rim2 (E248A), iron proteins were decreased, including aconitase (Fe-S), pyruvate dehydrogenase (lipoic acid containing) and cytochrome c (heme protein). Additionally, the rate of Fe-S cluster synthesis in isolated and intact mitochondria was decreased compared with the K299A mutant, consistent with the impairment of iron-dependent functions in that mutant. In summary, mitochondrial iron transport and pyrimidine transport by Rim2 occur separately and independently. Rim2 could be a bifunctional carrier protein.
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- 2019
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3. Mitochondria export iron–sulfur and sulfur intermediates to the cytoplasm for iron–sulfur cluster assembly and tRNA thiolation in yeast
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Ashutosh K. Pandey, Jayashree Pain, Debkumar Pain, and Andrew Dancis
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Iron-Sulfur Proteins ,inorganic chemicals ,0301 basic medicine ,Iron-sulfur cluster assembly ,Cytoplasm ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins ,Iron ,ATP-binding cassette transporter ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Mitochondrion ,Biochemistry ,Mitochondrial Proteins ,03 medical and health sciences ,RNA, Transfer ,Inner membrane ,Sulfhydryl Compounds ,Molecular Biology ,030102 biochemistry & molecular biology ,biology ,Chemistry ,Cysteine desulfurase ,Biological Transport ,RNA, Fungal ,Cell Biology ,Cell biology ,Metabolism ,030104 developmental biology ,Chaperone (protein) ,biology.protein ,Sulfur ,Biogenesis - Abstract
Iron–sulfur clusters are essential cofactors of proteins. In eukaryotes, iron–sulfur cluster biogenesis requires a mitochondrial iron–sulfur cluster machinery (ISC) and a cytoplasmic iron–sulfur protein assembly machinery (CIA). Here we used mitochondria and cytoplasm isolated from yeast cells, and [(35)S]cysteine to detect cytoplasmic Fe–(35)S cluster assembly on a purified apoprotein substrate. We showed that mitochondria generate an intermediate, called (Fe–S)(int), needed for cytoplasmic iron–sulfur cluster assembly. The mitochondrial biosynthesis of (Fe–S)(int) required ISC components such as Nfs1 cysteine desulfurase, Isu1/2 scaffold, and Ssq1 chaperone. Mitochondria then exported (Fe–S)(int) via the Atm1 transporter in the inner membrane, and we detected (Fe–S)(int) in active form. When (Fe–S)(int) was added to cytoplasm, CIA utilized it for iron–sulfur cluster assembly without any further help from the mitochondria. We found that both iron and sulfur for cytoplasmic iron–sulfur cluster assembly originate from the mitochondria, revealing a surprising and novel mitochondrial role. Mitochondrial (Fe–S)(int) export was most efficient in the presence of cytoplasm containing an apoprotein substrate, suggesting that mitochondria respond to the cytoplasmic demand for iron–sulfur cluster synthesis. Of note, the (Fe–S)(int) is distinct from the sulfur intermediate called S(int), which is also made and exported by mitochondria but is instead used for cytoplasmic tRNA thiolation. In summary, our findings establish a direct and vital role of mitochondria in cytoplasmic iron–sulfur cluster assembly in yeast cells.
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- 2019
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4. Cysteine desulfurase is regulated by phosphorylation of Nfs1 in yeast mitochondria
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Simon A.B. Knight, Alok Pandey, Jayashree Pain, Andrew Dancis, Heeyong Yoon, Debkumar Pain, and Agostinho G. Rocha
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0301 basic medicine ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Biology ,Article ,Mitochondrial Proteins ,Dephosphorylation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal ,Phosphorylation ,Kinase activity ,Protein kinase A ,Molecular Biology ,Casein Kinase I ,Cysteine desulfurase ,Cell Biology ,Mitochondria ,Cell biology ,030104 developmental biology ,Biochemistry ,Mitochondrial matrix ,Cysteine desulfurase activity ,Sulfurtransferases ,Molecular Medicine ,Protein Processing, Post-Translational ,Cysteine - Abstract
The cysteine desulfurase Nfs1/Isd11 uses the amino acid cysteine as the substrate and its activity is absolutely required for contributing persulfide sulfur to the essential process of iron-sulfur (Fe-S) cluster assembly in mitochondria. Here we describe a novel regulatory process involving phosphorylation of Nfs1 in mitochondria. Phosphorylation enhanced cysteine desulfurase activity, while dephosphorylation decreased its activity. Nfs1 phosphopeptides were identified, and the corresponding phosphosite mutants showed impaired persulfide formation. Nfs1 pull down from mitochondria recovered an associated kinase activity, and Yck2, a kinase present in the pull down, was able to phosphorylate Nfs1 in vitro and stimulate cysteine desulfurase activity. Yck2 exhibited an eclipsed distribution in the mitochondrial matrix, although other cellular localizations have been previously described. Mitochondria lacking the Yck2 protein kinase (∆yck2) showed less phosphorylating activity for Nfs1. Compared with wild-type mitochondria, ∆yck2 mitochondria revealed slower persulfide formation on Nfs1 consistent with a role of Yck2 in regulating mitochondrial cysteine desulfurase activity. We propose that Nfs1 phosphorylation may provide a means of rapid adaptation to increased metabolic demand for sulfur and Fe-S clusters within mitochondria.
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- 2018
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5. Nfs1 cysteine desulfurase protein complexes and phosphorylation sites as assessed by mass spectrometry
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Andrew Dancis, Jayashree Pain, Heeyong Yoon, Alok Pandey, Debkumar Pain, Simon A.B. Knight, and Agostinho G. Rocha
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0301 basic medicine ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Chemistry ,Kinase ,Cysteine desulfurase ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Mitochondrion ,lcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,Mass spectrometry ,Sulfur ,Cofactor ,Yeast ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Cell biology ,Biochemistry ,biology.protein ,lcsh:R858-859.7 ,Phosphorylation ,lcsh:Science (General) ,lcsh:Q1-390 - Abstract
Fe-S clusters are cofactors that participate in diverse and essential biological processes. Mitochondria contain a complete machinery for Fe-S cluster assembly. Cysteine desulfurase (Nfs1) is required generation of a form of activated sulfur and is essential for the initial Fe-S cluster assembly step. Using mass-spectometry we identified proteins that were copurified with Nfs1 using a pull-down strategy, including a novel protein kinase. Furthermore, we were able to identify phosphorylation sites on the Nfs1 protein. These data and analyses support the research article “Cysteine desulfurase is regulated by phosphorylation of Nfs1 in yeast mitochondria” by Rocha et al. (in press) [1].
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- 2017
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6. Roles of Fe–S proteins: from cofactor synthesis to iron homeostasis to protein synthesis
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Debkumar Pain and Andrew Dancis
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Iron-Sulfur Proteins ,0301 basic medicine ,Erythrocytes ,Iron ,Heme ,Mitochondrion ,Biology ,Article ,Cofactor ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,RNA, Transfer ,Neoplasms ,Genetics ,Protein biosynthesis ,Humans ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Cysteine desulfurase ,Metabolism ,Mitochondria ,Carbon-Sulfur Lyases ,030104 developmental biology ,Enzyme ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Multigene Family ,Protein Biosynthesis ,Sulfurtransferases ,Transfer RNA ,biology.protein ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Fe-S cluster assembly is an essential process for all cells. Impairment of Fe-S cluster assembly creates diseases in diverse and surprising ways. In one scenario, the loss of function of lipoic acid synthase, an enzyme with Fe-S cluster cofactor in mitochondria, impairs activity of various lipoamide-dependent enzymes with drastic consequences for metabolism. In a second scenario, the heme biosynthetic pathway in red cell precursors is specifically targeted, and iron homeostasis is perturbed, but lipoic acid synthesis is unaffected. In a third scenario, tRNA modifications arising from action of the cysteine desulfurase and/or Fe-S cluster proteins are lost, which may lead to impaired protein synthesis. These defects can then result in cancer, neurologic dysfunction or type 2 diabetes.
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- 2016
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7. Fe-S Cluster Biogenesis in Isolated Mammalian Mitochondria
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Arnab K. Ghosh, Jayashree Pain, Debkumar Pain, Alok Pandey, and Andrew Dancis
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Scaffold protein ,GTP' ,Cysteine desulfurase ,Cell Biology ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Aconitase ,Cofactor ,Chaperone (protein) ,Biosynthetic process ,biology.protein ,Molecular Biology ,Ferredoxin - Abstract
Iron-sulfur (Fe-S) clusters are essential cofactors, and mitochondria contain several Fe-S proteins, including the [4Fe-4S] protein aconitase and the [2Fe-2S] protein ferredoxin. Fe-S cluster assembly of these proteins occurs within mitochondria. Although considerable data exist for yeast mitochondria, this biosynthetic process has never been directly demonstrated in mammalian mitochondria. Using [(35)S]cysteine as the source of sulfur, here we show that mitochondria isolated from Cath.A-derived cells, a murine neuronal cell line, can synthesize and insert new Fe-(35)S clusters into aconitase and ferredoxins. The process requires GTP, NADH, ATP, and iron, and hydrolysis of both GTP and ATP is necessary. Importantly, we have identified the (35)S-labeled persulfide on the NFS1 cysteine desulfurase as a genuine intermediate en route to Fe-S cluster synthesis. In physiological settings, the persulfide sulfur is released from NFS1 and transferred to a scaffold protein, where it combines with iron to form an Fe-S cluster intermediate. We found that the release of persulfide sulfur from NFS1 requires iron, showing that the use of iron and sulfur for the synthesis of Fe-S cluster intermediates is a highly coordinated process. The release of persulfide sulfur also requires GTP and NADH, probably mediated by a GTPase and a reductase, respectively. ATP, a cofactor for a multifunctional Hsp70 chaperone, is not required at this step. The experimental system described here may help to define the biochemical basis of diseases that are associated with impaired Fe-S cluster biogenesis in mitochondria, such as Friedreich ataxia.
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- 2015
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8. Ionizing radiation-induced metabolic oxidative stress and prolonged cell injury
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Edouard I. Azzam, Debkumar Pain, and Jean-Paul Jay-Gerin
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Cancer Research ,Mitochondrial DNA ,DNA damage ,Mitochondrion ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,Antioxidants ,Genomic Instability ,Article ,Ionizing radiation ,Mitochondrial Proteins ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Reactive nitrogen species ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Reactive oxygen species ,Reactive Nitrogen Species ,Mitochondria ,Cell biology ,Oxidative Stress ,Oncology ,Biochemistry ,chemistry ,Radiolysis ,Reactive Oxygen Species ,Oxidative stress ,DNA Damage - Abstract
Cellular exposure to ionizing radiation leads to oxidizing events that alter atomic structure through direct interactions of radiation with target macromolecules or via products of water radiolysis. Further, the oxidative damage may spread from the targeted to neighboring, non-targeted bystander cells through redox-modulated intercellular communication mechanisms. To cope with the induced stress and the changes in the redox environment, organisms elicit transient responses at the molecular, cellular and tissue levels to counteract toxic effects of radiation. Metabolic pathways are induced during and shortly after the exposure. Depending on radiation dose, dose-rate and quality, these protective mechanisms may or may not be sufficient to cope with the stress. When the harmful effects exceed those of homeostatic biochemical processes, induced biological changes persist and may be propagated to progeny cells. Physiological levels of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species play critical roles in many cellular functions. In irradiated cells, levels of these reactive species may be increased due to perturbations in oxidative metabolism and chronic inflammatory responses, thereby contributing to the long-term effects of exposure to ionizing radiation on genomic stability. Here, in addition to immediate biological effects of water radiolysis on DNA damage, we also discuss the role of mitochondria in the delayed outcomes of ionization radiation. Defects in mitochondrial functions lead to accelerated aging and numerous pathological conditions. Different types of radiation vary in their linear energy transfer (LET) properties, and we discuss their effects on various aspects of mitochondrial physiology. These include short and long-term in vitro and in vivo effects on mitochondrial DNA, mitochondrial protein import and metabolic and antioxidant enzymes.
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- 2012
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9. Identification of a Nfs1p-bound persulfide intermediate in Fe–S cluster synthesis by intact mitochondria
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Heeyong Yoon, Andrew Dancis, Alok Pandey, Debkumar Pain, and Elise R. Lyver
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Sulfurtransferase ,Sulfides ,Mitochondrion ,Sulfur Radioisotopes ,Aconitase ,Article ,Mitochondrial Proteins ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Nucleotide ,Cysteine ,Molecular Biology ,Cysteine metabolism ,Aconitate Hydratase ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,Cysteine desulfurase ,Cell Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Mitochondria ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Isotope Labeling ,Sulfurtransferases ,Molecular Medicine - Abstract
Cysteine desulfurases generate a covalent persulfide intermediate from cysteine, and this activated form of sulfur is essential for the synthesis of iron-sulfur (Fe-S) clusters. In yeast mitochondria, there is a complete machinery for Fe-S cluster synthesis, including a cysteine desulfurase, Nfs1p. Here we show that following supplementation of isolated mitochondria with [(35)S]cysteine, a radiolabeled persulfide could be detected on Nfs1p. The persulfide persisted under conditions that did not permit Fe-S cluster formation, such as nucleotide and/or iron depletion of mitochondria. By contrast, under permissive conditions, the radiolabeled Nfs1p persulfide was greatly reduced and radiolabeled aconitase was formed, indicating transfer of persulfide to downstream Fe-S cluster recipients. Nfs1p in mitochondria was found to be relatively more resistant to inactivation by N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) as compared with a prokaryotic cysteine desulfurase. Mitochondria treated with NEM (1 mM) formed the persulfide on Nfs1p but failed to generate Fe-S clusters on aconitase, likely due to inactivation of downstream recipient(s) of the Nfs1p persulfide. Thus the Nfs1p-bound persulfide as described here represents a precursor en route to Fe-S cluster synthesis in mitochondria.
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- 2012
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10. Mitochondrial NADH Kinase, Pos5p, Is Required for Efficient Iron-Sulfur Cluster Biogenesis in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
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M. M. Balamurali, Jayashree Pain, Andrew Dancis, and Debkumar Pain
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Iron-Sulfur Proteins ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins ,Iron–sulfur cluster ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Biology ,Mitochondrion ,Biochemistry ,Mitochondrial Proteins ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal ,Inner mitochondrial membrane ,Molecular Biology ,Ferredoxin ,Aconitate Hydratase ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Models, Genetic ,Cell Biology ,NAD ,Mitochondria ,Oxygen ,Kinetics ,Oxidative Stress ,Phosphotransferases (Alcohol Group Acceptor) ,Metabolism ,chemistry ,Mitochondrial matrix ,Biosynthetic process ,NADH kinase ,Ferredoxins ,NAD+ kinase ,Sulfur - Abstract
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the mitochondrial inner membrane readily allows transport of cytosolic NAD(+), but not NADPH, to the matrix. Pos5p is the only known NADH kinase in the mitochondrial matrix. The enzyme phosphorylates NADH to NADPH and is the major source of NADPH in the matrix. The importance of mitochondrial NADPH for cellular physiology is underscored by the phenotypes of the Δpos5 mutant, characterized by oxidative stress sensitivity and iron-sulfur (Fe-S) cluster deficiency. Fe-S clusters are essential cofactors of proteins such as aconitase [4Fe-4S] and ferredoxin [2Fe-2S] in mitochondria. Intact mitochondria isolated from wild-type yeast can synthesize these clusters and insert them into the corresponding apoproteins. Here, we show that this process of Fe-S cluster biogenesis in wild-type mitochondria is greatly stimulated and kinetically favored by the addition of NAD(+) or NADH in a dose-dependent manner, probably via transport into mitochondria and subsequent conversion into NADPH. Unlike wild-type mitochondria, Δpos5 mitochondria cannot efficiently synthesize Fe-S clusters on endogenous aconitase or imported ferredoxin, although cluster biogenesis in isolated Δpos5 mitochondria is restored to a significant extent by a small amount of imported Pos5p. Interestingly, Fe-S cluster biogenesis in wild-type mitochondria is further enhanced by overexpression of Pos5p. The effects of Pos5p on Fe-S cluster generation in mitochondria indicate that one or more steps in the biosynthetic process require NADPH. The role of mitochondrial NADPH in Fe-S cluster biogenesis appears to be distinct from its function in anti-oxidant defense.
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- 2010
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11. Frataxin and Mitochondrial FeS Cluster Biogenesis
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Emmanuel Lesuisse, Debkumar Pain, Timothy L. Stemmler, Andrew Dancis, School of Medicine, Wayne State University [Detroit], Institut Jacques Monod (IJM (UMR_7592)), Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Department of Pharmacology and Physiology UMDNJ New Jersey Medical School (UMDNJ), Rutgers New Jersey Medical School (NJMS), Rutgers University System (Rutgers)-Rutgers University System (Rutgers), Department of Medicine, Division of Hematology-Oncology, and University of Pennsylvania [Philadelphia]
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Iron-Sulfur Proteins ,Scaffold protein ,Iron ,Sulfides ,Mitochondrion ,Biochemistry ,Mitochondrial Proteins ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Biosynthesis ,Iron-Binding Proteins ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,[SDV.BBM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry, Molecular Biology ,Molecular Biology ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,biology ,Cysteine desulfurase ,Neurodegeneration ,Minireviews ,Iron-binding proteins ,Cell Biology ,medicine.disease ,Mitochondria ,Carbon-Sulfur Lyases ,chemistry ,Friedreich Ataxia ,Frataxin ,biology.protein ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Biogenesis - Abstract
International audience; Friedreich ataxia is an inherited neurodegenerative disease caused by frataxin deficiency. Frataxin is a conserved mitochondrial protein that plays a role in FeS cluster assembly in mitochondria. FeS clusters are modular cofactors that perform essential functions throughout the cell. They are synthesized by a multistep and multisubunit mitochondrial machinery that includes the scaffold protein Isu for assembling a protein-bound FeS cluster intermediate. Frataxin interacts with Isu, iron, and the cysteine desulfurase Nfs1, which supplies sulfide, thus placing it at the center of mitochondrial FeS cluster biosynthesis.
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- 2010
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12. A GTP:AMP Phosphotransferase, Adk2p, in Saccharomyces cerevisiae
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Yajuan Gu, Donna M. Gordon, Boominathan Amutha, and Debkumar Pain
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,GTP' ,biology ,C-terminus ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Adenylate kinase ,Cell Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Biochemistry ,Yeast ,Amino acid ,Phosphotransferase ,chemistry ,Protein folding ,Molecular Biology - Abstract
Adenylate kinases participate in maintaining the homeostasis of cellular nucleotides. Depending on the yeast strains, the GTP:AMP phosphotransferase is encoded by the nuclear gene ADK2 with or without a single base pair deletion/insertion near the 3′ end of the open reading frame, and the corresponding protein exists as either Adk2p (short) or Adk2p (long) in the mitochondrial matrix. These two forms are identical except that the three C-terminal residues of Adk2p (short) are changed in Adk2p (long), and the latter contains an additional nine amino acids at the C terminus of the protein. The short form of Adk2p has so far been considered to be inactive (Schricker, R., Magdolen, V., Strobel, G., Bogengruber, E., Breitenbach, M., and Bandlow, W. (1995) J. Biol. Chem. 270, 31103–31110). Using purified proteins, we show that at the physiological temperature for yeast growth (30 °C), both short and long forms of Adk2p are enzymatically active. However, in contrast to the short form, Adk2p (long) is quite resistant to thermal inactivation, urea denaturation, and degradation by trypsin. Unfolding of the long form by high concentrations of urea greatly stimulated its import into isolated mitochondria. Using an integration-based gene-swapping approach, we found that regardless of the yeast strains used, the steady state levels of endogenous Adk2p (long) in mitochondria were 5–10-fold lower compared with those of Adk2p (short). Together, these results suggest that the modified C-terminal domain in Adk2p (long) is not essential for enzyme activity, but it contributes to and strengthens protein folding and/or stability and is particularly important for maintaining enzyme activity under stress conditions.
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- 2005
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13. Adrenodoxin Reductase Homolog (Arh1p) of Yeast Mitochondria Required for Iron Homeostasis
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Jie Li, Debkumar Pain, Sandeep Saxena, and Andrew Dancis
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Hemeproteins ,Hemeprotein ,Iron ,Cell ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Biology ,Mitochondrion ,Biochemistry ,Aconitase ,Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic ,Adrenodoxin reductase ,Open Reading Frames ,Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal ,medicine ,Homeostasis ,Promoter Regions, Genetic ,Molecular Biology ,Aconitate Hydratase ,Galactose ,Cell Biology ,Metabolism ,Yeast ,Mitochondria ,Ferredoxin-NADP Reductase ,Kinetics ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cytoplasm - Abstract
Arh1p is an essential mitochondrial protein of yeast with reductase activity. Here we show that this protein is involved in iron metabolism. A yeast strain was constructed in which the open reading frame was placed under the control of a galactose-regulated promoter. Protein expression was induced by galactose and repressed to undetectable levels in the absence of galactose, although cells grew quite well in the absence of inducer. Under noninducing conditions, cellular iron uptake was dysregulated, exhibiting a failure to repress in response to medium iron. Iron trafficking within the cell was also disturbed. Exposure of Arh1p-depleted cells to increasing iron concentrations during growth led to drastic increases in mitochondrial iron, indicating a loss of homeostatic control. Activity of aconitase, a prototype Fe-S protein, was deficient at all concentrations of mitochondrial iron, although the protein level was unaltered. Heme protein deficiencies were exacerbated in the iron-loaded mitochondria, suggesting a toxic side effect of accumulated iron. Finally, a time course correlated the cellular depletion of Arh1p with the coordinated appearance of various mutant phenotypes including dysregulated cellular iron uptake, deficiency of Fe-S protein activities in mitochondria and cytoplasm, and deficiency of hemoproteins. Thus, Arh1p is required for control of cellular and mitochondrial iron levels and for the activities of Fe-S cluster proteins.
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- 2001
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14. A Multisubunit Complex of Outer and Inner Mitochondrial Membrane Protein Translocases Stabilized in Vivo by Translocation Intermediates
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Sandeep Saxena, Debkumar Pain, Norbert Schulke, Naresh Babu V. Sepuri, Donna M. Gordon, and Andrew Dancis
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Macromolecular Substances ,Protein Conformation ,Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,Translocase of the outer membrane ,Membrane Proteins ,Biological Transport ,TIM/TOM complex ,Intracellular Membranes ,Cell Biology ,Biology ,Mitochondrion ,Mitochondrial carrier ,Biochemistry ,Mitochondria ,Cell biology ,Mitochondrial matrix ,Translocase of the inner membrane ,Inner membrane ,Pyrroline Carboxylate Reductases ,Carrier Proteins ,Staphylococcal Protein A ,Inner mitochondrial membrane ,Molecular Biology ,Glutathione Transferase - Abstract
Translocation of nuclear encoded preproteins into the mitochondrial matrix requires the coordinated action of two translocases: one (Tom) located in the outer mitochondrial membrane and the other (Tim) located in the inner membrane. These translocases reversibly cooperate during protein import. We have previously constructed a chimeric precursor (pPGPrA) consisting of an authentic mitochondrial precursor at the N terminus (Δ1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate dehydrogenase, pPut) linked, through glutathione S-transferase, to protein A. When pPGPrA is expressed in yeast, it becomes irreversibly arrested during translocation across the outer and inner mitochondrial membranes. Consequently, the two membranes of mitochondria become progressively “zippered” together, forming long stretches in which they are in close contact (Schulke, N., Sepuri, N. B. V., and Pain, D. (1997) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A.94, 7314–7319). We now demonstrate that trapped PGPrA intermediates hold the import channels stably together and inhibit mitochondrial protein import and cell growth. Using IgG-Sepharose affinity chromatography of solubilized zippered membranes, we have isolated a multisubunit complex that contains all Tom and Tim components known to be essential for import of matrix-targeted proteins, namely Tom40, Tom22, Tim17, Tim23, Tim44, and matrix-localized Hsp70. Further characterization of this complex may shed light on structural features of the complete mitochondrial import machinery.
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- 1999
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15. The Yeast Connection to Friedreich Ataxia
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Simon A.B. Knight, Debkumar Pain, Roy J. Kim, and Andrew Dancis
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congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins ,Ataxia ,Iron ,Library science ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Biology ,Mitochondrial Proteins ,Iron-Binding Proteins ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Homeostasis ,Humans ,Genetics(clinical) ,HSP70 Heat-Shock Proteins ,Mitochondrial protein ,Genetics (clinical) ,Iron metabolism ,Mitochondria ,Phosphotransferases (Alcohol Group Acceptor) ,Friedreich Ataxia ,medicine.symptom ,Research Article ,Molecular Chaperones - Abstract
We thank John Ashkenas for his editorial assistance and David Koeller for data prior to publication. A.D. and D.P. are supported by grants DK53953-01 and GM57067-01, respectively, from the National Institutes of Health.
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- 1999
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16. Mt-Hsp70 Homolog, Ssc2p, Required for Maturation of Yeast Frataxin and Mitochondrial Iron Homeostasis
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Naresh Babu V. Sepuri, Debkumar Pain, Simon A.B. Knight, and Andrew Dancis
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Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins ,Iron ,Mutant ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Mitochondrion ,Models, Biological ,Biochemistry ,Fungal Proteins ,Mitochondrial Proteins ,Iron-Binding Proteins ,Organelle ,Homeostasis ,HSP70 Heat-Shock Proteins ,Molecular Biology ,Gene Library ,Regulation of gene expression ,biology ,Cell Biology ,Yeast ,Mitochondria ,Cell biology ,Phosphotransferases (Alcohol Group Acceptor) ,Chaperone (protein) ,Mutagenesis, Site-Directed ,Frataxin ,biology.protein ,DNAJA3 ,Molecular Chaperones - Abstract
Here we show that the yeast mitochondrial chaperone Ssc2p, a homolog of mt-Hsp70, plays a critical role in mitochondrial iron homeostasis. Yeast with ssc2-1 mutations were identified by a screen for altered iron-dependent gene regulation and mitochondrial dysfunction. These mutants exhibit increased cellular iron uptake, and the iron accumulates exclusively within mitochondria. Yfh1p is homologous to frataxin, the human protein implicated in the neurodegenerative disease, Friedreich's ataxia. Like mutants of yfh1, ssc2-1 mutants accumulate vast quantities of iron in mitochondria. Furthermore, using import studies with isolated mitochondria, we demonstrate a specific role for Ssc2p in the maturation of Yfh1p within this organelle. This function for a mitochondrial Hsp70 chaperone is likely to be conserved, implying that a human homolog of Ssc2p may be involved in iron homeostasis and in neurodegenerative disease.
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- 1998
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17. The Mechanism of Action of Steroidogenic Acute Regulatory Protein (StAR)
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Naresh Babu V. Sepuri, Hidemichi Watari, Futoshi Arakane, George L. Gerton, Mitchell Lewis, Jerome F. Strauss, Caleb B. Kallen, Steven Stayrook, James A. Foster, and Debkumar Pain
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endocrine system ,urogenital system ,Steroidogenic acute regulatory protein ,STARD3 ,STARD4 ,Cell Biology ,Mitochondrion ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Cytosol ,Cytoplasm ,Pregnenolone ,medicine ,Inner mitochondrial membrane ,Molecular Biology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (StAR) plays an essential role in steroidogenesis, facilitating delivery of cholesterol to cytochrome P450scc on the inner mitochondrial membrane. StAR is synthesized in the cytoplasm and is subsequently imported by mitochondria and processed to a mature form by cleavage of the NH2-terminal mitochondrial targeting sequence. To explore the mechanism of StAR action, we produced 6-histidine-tagged N-62 StAR (His-tag StAR) constructs lacking the NH2-terminal 62 amino acids that encode the mitochondrial targeting sequence and examined their steroidogenic activity in intact cells and on isolated mitochondria. His-tag StAR proteins stimulated pregnenolone synthesis to the same extent as wild-type StAR when expressed in COS-1 cells transfected with the cholesterol side-chain cleavage system. His-tag StAR was diffusely distributed in the cytoplasm of transfected COS-1 cells whereas wild-type StAR was localized to mitochondria. There was no evidence at the light or electron microscope levels for selective localization of His-tag StAR protein to mitochondrial membranes. In vitro import assays demonstrated that wild-type StAR preprotein was imported and processed to mature protein that was protected from subsequent trypsin treatment. In contrast, His-tag StAR was not imported and protein associated with mitochondria was sensitive to trypsin. Using metabolically labeled COS-1 cells transfected with wild-type or His-tag StAR constructs, we confirmed that wild-type StAR preprotein was imported and processed by mitochondria, whereas His-tag StAR remained largely cytosolic and unprocessed. To determine whether cytosolic factors are required for StAR action, we developed an assay system using washed mitochondria isolated from bovine corpora lutea and purified recombinant His-tag StAR proteins expressed in Escherichia coli. Recombinant His-tag StAR stimulated pregnenolone production in a dose- and time-dependent manner, functioning at nanomolar concentrations. A point mutant of StAR (A218V) that causes lipoid congenital adrenal hyperplasia was incorporated into the His-tag protein. This mutant was steroidogenically inactive in COS-1 cells and on isolated mitochondria. Our observations conclusively document that StAR acts on the outside of mitochondria, independent of mitochondrial import, and in the absence of cytosol. The ability to produce bioactive recombinant StAR protein paves the way for refined structural studies of StAR and StAR mutants.
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- 1998
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18. Signal peptide analogs derived from two chloroplast precursors interact with the signal recognition system of the chloroplast envelope
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Debkumar Pain, Danny J. Schnell, and Günter Blobel
- Subjects
Signal peptide ,Chloroplasts ,Transcription, Genetic ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique ,Protein Sorting Signals ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Chloroplast membrane ,Protein biosynthesis ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Protein Precursors ,Molecular Biology ,Peptide sequence ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,food and beverages ,Biological membrane ,Cell Biology ,Precipitin Tests ,Amino acid ,Chloroplast ,Microscopy, Fluorescence ,chemistry ,Chloroplast DNA ,Protein Biosynthesis ,Biophysics ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
We have used synthetic peptides representing segments of the signal sequences of preferredoxin (pFd) and the precursor of the small subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (pS) to study interactions with the signal sequence recognition system at the chloroplast surface. Peptides representing the COOH-terminal 30 amino acids of the pFd and pS signal peptides were able to completely and reversibly inhibit the import of their homologous precursors into isolated chloroplasts at a 2.5 microM concentration. Import was blocked at the level of precursor binding to the chloroplast. This inhibition of precursor binding and import was not due to disruption of chloroplast integrity as incubation of isolated chloroplasts with the peptides did not cause measurable perturbation of the envelope membranes. The peptides also were able to block the import of the heterologous precursor protein, suggesting that pS and pFd share a common signal sequence recognition system. Visualization of the bound peptides at the chloroplast surface by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy using antipeptide antibodies gave a marked punctate staining pattern. This pattern is consistent with the localization of chloroplast import receptor(s) at contact zones between the inner and outer envelope membranes.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Monovalent lectin as a novel tool for the resolution of microheterogeneity in glycoproteins
- Author
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Avadhesha Surolia, Debkumar Pain, P.S. Appukuttan, and B.K. Bachhawat
- Subjects
endocrine system ,Resolution (mass spectrometry) ,Biophysics ,Ricin ,Biochemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Molecular Biology ,Glycoproteins ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,Lectin ,Cell Biology ,Fetuin ,Molecular Weight ,carbohydrates (lipids) ,enzymes and coenzymes (carbohydrates) ,chemistry ,Galactose ,Chromatography, Gel ,Sialic Acids ,biology.protein ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel ,alpha-Fetoproteins ,Glycoprotein - Abstract
Microheterogeneous populations of the glycoprotein fetuin were found to bind molecules of the galactose-binding lectin ricin in proportion to the degree of desialation of the former and the number of galactose moieties exposed as a result. Monitoring the difference in molecular weight of the fetuin-ricin complexes formed from radioiodinated ricin, native fetuin could be resolved into three broad heterogeneous groups.
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. A new approach for quantitation of receptors and their ligands
- Author
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Avadhesha Surolia and Debkumar Pain
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Estradiol ,Protein Conformation ,Ligand ,Estrogen receptor ,Model system ,Biology ,Conjugated system ,Ligands ,Malate dehydrogenase ,Molecular Weight ,Enzyme ,Receptors, Estrogen ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Malate Dehydrogenase ,Structural Biology ,Methods ,Animals ,Cattle ,Female ,Receptor ,Molecular Biology ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists - Abstract
A novel and sensitive method for quantitating receptors and their ligands is described, using the calf uterine estrogen receptor and estradiol as a model system. When ligand conjugated to malate dehydrogenase is incubated with the estrogen receptor, the enzyme is inhibited proportionately to the concentration of receptor. However, receptor saturated with free ligand has almost no effect on the ligand-conjugated enzyme. The assay can detect as little as three femtomoles of receptor and one femtomole of estradiol and can, in principle, be applied to any receptor-ligand interaction.
- Published
- 1980
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Protein A: nature's universal anti-antibody
- Author
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M. Islam Khan, Avadhesha Surolia, and Debkumar Pain
- Subjects
Anti antibody ,biology.protein ,Staphylococcal protein ,Biology ,Protein A ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry ,Cell biology - Abstract
Staphylococcal protein A specifically interacts with immunogobulins. This fact is being used in various disciplines of biology and some of the unique properties of protein A and their applications are summarized in this review.
- Published
- 1982
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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