Intracellular compartments and Protein Sorting Flashcards

1
Q

How much of cell volume does the nucleus make up

A

10%

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

What membrane is the ER continous with?

A

The nuclear membrane

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

What makes up the sorting and exocytotic network

A

ER, Golgi, and secretory vessicles

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

What makes up the endocytic network?

A

Plasma membrane endosomes and lysosomes

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

Where do peroxisomes derive from

A

From the ER and they are oxidizing vessicles

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

mitochondria

A

endosymbiot ATP generating organelles

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

What percent of total cell membrane composition is the plasma membrane?

A

2%, the rest is internal membranes

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

Describe gated transport

A

Transport through nuclear pores

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

Describe transmembrane transport

A

Translocation across a limiting lipid bilayer.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

Describe vesiculat transport

A

transport withing lipid bilayer enclosed organelles

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

Describe an ER signal sequence

A

has a hydrophobic center

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

Describe mitochondrial signal sequence

A

aphipathic alpha helices

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

Describe a nuclear import signal

A

very basic amino acids (Lys, Arg)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

Describe a peroxisomal signal

A

SKL-COOH

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

Describe a nuclear export signal

A

Leucine rich

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

Describe the structure of a nuclear pore complex

A

8 proteins make up the edge (basket) of the nuclear pore. Fibrils extend cytosolically and nuclearly. The fibrils attach themselves to cargo and the pore is permeable to proteins 60kDA or less.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
17
Q

What are the concentrations of RAN-GTP in the cytosol vs the nucleus

A

Low RAN-GTP in the cytosol and high in the nucleus

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
18
Q

What do GEF and GAP do?

A

GAP- GTPase activating protein. hydrolyzes GTP to GDP converting RanGTP to RanGDP

GEF- Guanine nucleotide exchange factor. Exchanges GDP for GTP. Catalyzes RanGTP formation in the nucleus

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
19
Q

Describe the Ran GTPase cycle in relationship to nuclear export

A

In order for a protein to leave the nucleus it has to have a nucleus export signal and bind to an export protein. The cargo and the export protein bind together along with GTP. This complex binds to the fibrils leaves the nucleus through the nuclear pores. In the cytosol RanGAP hydrolyzes the GTP to GDP releasing the cargo into the cytoplasm. The GDP and expotin go back to the nucleus where GDP is exchanged for GTP bt GEF

20
Q

Describe the RanGTPase cycle in relationship to nuclear import.

A

Importin attaches to cargo with a lysine rich nuclear import signal. The complex binds to the nuclear pore and goes into the nucleus. RanGTP binds to the complex and stimulates disassociation of the cargo. GTP still bound to importin travels back to the cytosol where RanBP1 and RanGAP act on it to hydrolyze GTP disassociating it from imortin. GDP travels back to the nucleus where GEF acts on it to make GTP again and the cycle continues

21
Q

Describe the regulation of NFkB

A

NFkB exists in the cytosol bound to its inhibitor I-kB. When I-kB is phosphorylated it disassociates from NFkB revealing its nuclear import signal. NFkB gets taken into the nucleus and activates genes

22
Q

How do nuclear proteins get back to the nucleus after mitosis

A

After the nucleus breaks down nuclear proteins have nuclear localization signals still bound to them. After mitosis the cell divides and the proteins are divided, the proteins go where they belong in the cell based on their attached signals

23
Q

How many membranes and compartments does the mitochdonrion have?

A

2 membranes

4 compartments

  • outer membrane
  • inner membrane
  • intermembrane space
  • mitochondrial matrix
24
Q

What encodes mitochondrial proteins

A

Majority of mitochondrial proteins are encoded by the nuclear genome, even though mitochondria have their own DNA. Mitochondrial proteins recieve a mitochondrial localization signal so they get shuttled to the mitochondria (interdependency)

25
Q

Describe the mitochondrial signal protein and how it binds to the importin.

A

The mitochondrial signal protein is a an N-terminal amphipathic alpha helix with a + charged face. The import protein have a - charged divet that it grabs onto the + charge to transport the mitochondrial protein

26
Q

Describ the steps of protein import into the mitochondria

A

Protein with a mitochondrial localization signal binds to TOM (translocase of outer membrane).Cytosolic Hsp70 unfolds the protein (using ATP) and slides it through the aqeous pore. It then binds to TIM (Translocase of inner membrane) to get inside the mitchondrial matrix. The electrochemical potential of the inner membrane is dissipated to electrophorese the unfolded protein into the matrix space. When the protein is inside the matrix mitochondrial Hsp70 uses ATP to pull the protein through the pore. Once in the signal peptide is cleaved.

27
Q

Once inside the mitochondrial matrix what protiens help the unfolded protein to fold

A

Hsp70 binds to the unfolded protein domains and protects them while the rest of the protein folds up. Once folded they will dosassociate

Hsp60(GroES) is a barell shape and encloses the unfolded protein in a microenvironment so that it can fold.

Both processes are ATP dependent.

28
Q

Functions of Peroxisomes

A

Oxidation of long chain fatty acids

Oxidation of branched chain fatty acids

Oxidation of cholesterol to bile in the liver

synthesis of plasmalogens (membrane lipids found in myelin)

Oxidation (detoxification) of some metabolic intermediates and foreign substances for elimination (flavoprotein oxidases and catalase)

Decomposition of hydrogen peroxide

beta-oxidation of fats to make acetyl Coa

29
Q

Which organelles do most of the oxidation in cells

A

mitochondria, but peroxisomes isolate oxidtion reactions

30
Q

What is the key redox reaction in peroxisomes?

A

Catalase

H2O2 + H2O2 ⇒ 2H2O + O2

S’H2 + H2O2 ⇒ S’ H2O

31
Q

How do peroxisomes arise?

A

come from the ER by a budding process. They are expanded by acquiring new membrane from the ER and then dividing by fission

32
Q

How do peroxisomal proteins get into the peroxisome?

A

They are imported from the cytsol after the peroxisome is formed. All proteins go into the peroxisome post translationally through signals on their C terminus

33
Q

Function of smoothe ER

A

release and reuptake of calcium and contains enzymes for detox

lipid biogenesis

34
Q

Describe the function of the rough ER

A
35
Q

Function of the transitional ER

A

Vessicles and ER cargo bud off here.

36
Q

What occurs when a protein has a an ER localization signal.

A

The ribosome pauses translation and localizes with ER. So as the protein is synthesized it is pushed through an aqeous pore into the ER. Energy for this comes GTP hydrolysis.

37
Q

What is the ER lumen topologicaly equivalent to

A

The outside of the cell.

38
Q

Steps in co-translational transport

A

A protein being translated has an ER signal peptide, which is recognized by a signal recognition protein. The ribosome goes to the ER pore Sec61, translation continues forcing the protein through the pore. When translation completes the protein is in the ER lumen, the signal is cleaved by a signal peptidase, and the ribosome disassociates.

39
Q

How are transmembrane proteins localized in the membrane

A

Membrane proteins have a stop transfer sequences. The stop transfer sequences is a stretch og hydrophobic residues flanked by charged residues (the se are the start and stop signals) When a ribosome reaches a stop transfer it will finish tranlation cytosolically. The stop sequence will stay in the Sec61 and will come out into the membrane when the Sec61 is pried open.

40
Q

How does a transmembrane proteins get either its amino or carboxy end to to face the cytosol?

A

The orientation of the peptide within the ER Sec61 channel depends on the amino acid sequences that flank the hydrophobic core. Whichever end of the hydrophobic core is more positive will face the cytosol

41
Q

How do you get a multipass transmembrane protein?

A

Multiple start and stop sequences. start-start-stop-start-stop. hydrophibic sequences alternate between them.

42
Q

Describe the attachment of mannose rich oligosaccharide units to aspargine residues in N-linked glycoproteins

A

Oligotransferase transfers sugar to the asparagine residues in the sequence Asn-X-Ser/Thr. The sugar is atached to the nitrogen in the Asn. Glucosidases will act to trim the sugar, and finaly mannosidase will trim it into a mannose. It can now go to the Golgi

43
Q

What is the function of N-glycan structures?

A

1) To control ER folding
2) To protect the underlying protein from proteases or antibodies or other attacks.
3) To add hydrodynamic volume to the protein.
4) To operate as part of a sorting signal
5) To provid inter-cellular communication via lectins

44
Q

Identify the lipid that participates in the assembly and transfer of the high mannose-oligosacharride chain in the N-linked glycoproteins.

A

Dolichol lipid

45
Q

Describe the unfolded protein response

A

1) Misfolded proteins in the ER signal the need for more chaperone proteins by activating a transmembrane kinase
2) Activated kinase turns into a endoribonuclease
3) Endoribonuclease cuts specific RNA molecules at 2 positions removing an intron
4) two exons are ligated to form an active mRNA
5) mRNA is translated to make a gene regulatory protein
6) Gene regulatory protein enters nucleus and activates genes encoding ER chaperons
7) Chaperones are made in the ER where they help to fold proteins