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The mitochondrial disulphide relay machinery is essential for the import and oxidative folding of many proteins in the mitochondrial intermembrane space. Its core component, the import receptor MIA40 (also CHCHD4), serves as an oxidoreductase but also as a chaperone holdase, which initially interacts with its substrates non-covalently before introducing disulphide bonds for folding and retaining proteins in the intermembrane space. Interactome studies have identified diverse substrates of MIA40, among them the intrinsically disordered HCLS1-associated protein X-1 (HAX1). Interestingly, this protein does not contain cysteines, raising the question of how and to what end HAX1 can interact with MIA40. Here, we demonstrate that MIA40 non-covalently interacts with HAX1 independent of its redox-active cysteines. While HAX1 import is driven by its weak mitochondrial targeting sequence, its subsequent transient interaction with MIA40 stabilizes the protein in the intermembrane space. HAX1 solely depends on the holdase activity of MIA40, and the absence of MIA40 results in the aggregation, degradation and loss of HAX1. Collectively, our study introduces HAX1 as the first endogenous MIA40 substrate without cysteines and demonstrates the diverse functions of this highly conserved oxidoreductase and import receptor.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/febs.17328 | DOI Listing |
Electrophoresis
September 2025
State Key Laboratory of Microbial Technology, Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation Center of Biomedical Functional Materials, Jiangsu Key Laboratory of New Power Batteries, School of Chemistry and Materials Science, Nanjing Normal University, Nanjing, China.
Cytochrome c (cyt c) is a heme protein located in the mitochondrial intermembrane space. Because the release of cyt c is a highly specific event in apoptotic signaling, it can serve as an apoptosis-related marker. To date, three frequently used aptamers for cyt c (Apt40, Apt61, and Apt76) have been selected and applied in the field of sensing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrends Biochem Sci
August 2025
Institute of Medical Microbiology, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland; Faculty of Science, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland. Electronic address:
Cells depend on the efficient import of thousands of nuclear-encoded mitochondrial proteins to maintain mitochondrial function. A new study by Flohr et al. reveals a quality control strategy that traps a subset of mitochondrial precursors in the intermembrane space during energy stress, preventing their toxic accumulation in the cytosol or nucleus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Biol Macromol
September 2025
College of Food Science and Engineering, Inner Mongolia Agricultural University, Hohhot 010018, China. Electronic address:
This study aimed to investigate through in vitro metabolic experiments how β-glucan conformation influences immune induction, and to preliminarily explore the synergistic anti-inflammatory effects of ellagic acid. Our findings indicated molecular weight as a key determinant of β-glucan activity, primarily influencing the growth of energy metabolism-related gut microbiota and associated gene expression. Low-molecular-weight (LMW) β-1,3/1,4-glucan emerged as the optimal carbon source, selectively enriching butyrate-producing bacteria and stimulating proliferative cellular metabolism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTheriogenology
August 2025
Laboratory of Chromosome Biology, Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry, Martinsried, DE-82152, Germany. Electronic address:
Calcium (Ca) is known as a key regulator of sperm physiology, playing a crucial role in capacitation, hyperactivation, the acrosome reaction, and fertilisation. Despite this, whether it shapes the sperm's ability to withstand liquid preservation has not been addressed. Herein, we investigated how altering Ca availability to pig sperm during storage at 17 °C affects their quality and metabolic activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Chem
June 2025
Cell Biology, 26562 University of Kaiserslautern, RPTU, Erwin-Schrödinger-Strasse 13, D-67663 Kaiserslautern, Germany.
The mitochondrial solute carrier family, also called SLC25 family, comprises a group of structurally and evolutionary related transporters that are embedded in the mitochondrial inner membrane. About 35 and 53 mitochondrial carrier proteins are known in yeast and human cells, respectively, which transport nucleotides, metabolites, amino acids, fatty acids, inorganic ions and cofactors across the inner membrane. They are proposed to function by a common rocker-switch mechanism, alternating between conformations that expose substrate-binding pockets to the intermembrane space (cytoplasmic state) and to the matrix (matrix state).
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