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Cytosolic proteostasis through importing of misfolded proteins into mitochondria

Authors :
Andrei Kucharavy
Erli Jin
Rong Li
Chuankai Zhou
Ying Zhang
Linhao Ruan
Laurence Florens
Zhihui Wen
Source :
Nature. 543:443-446
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2017.

Abstract

Loss of proteostasis underlies ageing and neurodegeneration characterized by the accumulation of protein aggregates and mitochondrial dysfunction. Although many neurodegenerative-disease-associated proteins can be found in mitochondria, it remains unclear how mitochondrial dysfunction and protein aggregation could be related. In dividing yeast cells, protein aggregates that form under stress or during ageing are preferentially retained by the mother cell, in part through tethering to mitochondria, while the disaggregase Hsp104 helps to dissociate aggregates and thereby enables refolding or degradation of misfolded proteins. Here we show that, in yeast, cytosolic proteins prone to aggregation are imported into mitochondria for degradation. Protein aggregates that form under heat shock contain both cytosolic and mitochondrial proteins and interact with the mitochondrial import complex. Many aggregation-prone proteins enter the mitochondrial intermembrane space and matrix after heat shock, and some do so even without stress. Timely dissolution of cytosolic aggregates requires the mitochondrial import machinery and proteases. Blocking mitochondrial import but not proteasome activity causes a marked delay in the degradation of aggregated proteins. Defects in cytosolic Hsp70s leads to enhanced entry of misfolded proteins into mitochondria and elevated mitochondrial stress. We term this mitochondria-mediated proteostasis mechanism MAGIC (mitochondria as guardian in cytosol) and provide evidence that it may exist in human cells.

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
543
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ff3f1ca105f509f0cb0862b003aaacbb
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature21695