Switch-like mRNA localization to mitochondria arises from nonequilibrium protein translation effects
ORAL
Abstract
Many mitochondrial genes are encoded in the nucleus, translated in the cytosol, and the proteins imported into mitochondria. In yeast, the fraction of cell volume occupied by mitochondria changes with growth conditions. Some nuclear-encoded mRNA switch from low to high mitochondrial localization as the mitochondrial volume fraction increases, while the localization of other genes remains consistently low or high. mRNA can be effectively tethered to mitochondria via the mitochondrial import of nascent, incompletely translated polypeptides, enhancing mitochondrial localization. To understand the distinct localization behaviours for mRNA of nuclear-encoded mitochondrial genes, we use a quantitative model of mRNA diffusion around the cell, protein translation along mRNA, and nascent polypeptide tethering. Using this model, we explain how the nonequilibrium nature of protein translation combines with asymmetric diffusive search times to allow for switch-like, consistently low, or consistently high mitochondrial localization.
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Presenters
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Aidan Brown
Ryerson Univ, Ryerson University
Authors
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Aidan Brown
Ryerson Univ, Ryerson University
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Ximena Garcia-Arceo
University of California, San Diego
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Tatsuhisa Tsuboi
University of California, San Diego
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Brian Zid
University of California, San Diego
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Elena Koslover
University of California, San Diego