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Interactions between mitoNEET and NAF-1 in cells
Author(s) -
Ola Karmi,
Sarah H. Holt,
Luhua Song,
Sagi Tamir,
Yuting Luo,
Fang Bai,
Ammar Adenwalla,
Merav DarashYahana,
YangSung Sohn,
Patricia A. Jennings,
Rajeev K. Azad,
José N. Onuchic,
Faruck Morcos,
Rachel Nechushtai,
Ron Mittler
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0175796
Subject(s) - autophagy , microbiology and biotechnology , bimolecular fluorescence complementation , reactive oxygen species , mitochondrion , neurodegeneration , oxidative stress , chemistry , mtorc1 , pi3k/akt/mtor pathway , biology , apoptosis , signal transduction , biochemistry , yeast , medicine , disease , pathology
The NEET proteins mitoNEET (mNT) and nutrient-deprivation autophagy factor-1 (NAF-1) are required for cancer cell proliferation and resistance to oxidative stress. NAF-1 and mNT are also implicated in a number of other human pathologies including diabetes, neurodegeneration and cardiovascular disease, as well as in development, differentiation and aging. Previous studies suggested that mNT and NAF-1 could function in the same pathway in mammalian cells, preventing the over-accumulation of iron and reactive oxygen species (ROS) in mitochondria. Nevertheless, it is unknown whether these two proteins directly interact in cells, and how they mediate their function. Here we demonstrate, using yeast two-hybrid, in vivo bimolecular fluorescence complementation (BiFC), direct coupling analysis (DCA), RNA-sequencing, ROS and iron imaging, and single and double shRNA lines with suppressed mNT, NAF-1 and mNT/NAF-1 expression, that mNT and NAF-1 directly interact in mammalian cells and could function in the same cellular pathway. We further show using an in vitro cluster transfer assay that mNT can transfer its clusters to NAF-1. Our study highlights the possibility that mNT and NAF-1 function as part of an iron-sulfur (2Fe-2S) cluster relay to maintain the levels of iron and Fe-S clusters under control in the mitochondria of mammalian cells, thereby preventing the activation of apoptosis and/or autophagy and supporting cellular proliferation.

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