Deciphering the potential involvement of PXMP2 and PEX11B in hydrogen peroxide permeation across the peroxisomal membrane reveals a role for PEX11B in protein sorting

Publication date: Available online 24 May 2019Source: Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - BiomembranesAuthor(s): Celien Lismont, Janet Koster, Sarah Provost, Myriam Baes, Paul P. Van Veldhoven, Hans R. Waterham, Marc FransenAbstractPeroxisomes have the intrinsic ability to produce and scavenge hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), a diffusible second messenger that controls diverse cellular processes by modulating protein activity through cysteine oxidation. Current evidence indicates that H2O2, a molecule whose physicochemical properties are similar to those of water, traverses cellular membranes through specific aquaporin channels, called peroxiporins. Until now, no peroxiporin-like proteins have been identified in the peroxisomal membrane, and it is widely assumed that small molecules such as H2O2 can freely permeate this membrane through PXMP2, a non-selective pore-forming protein with an upper molecular size limit of 300–600 Da. By employing the CRISPR-Cas9 technology in combination with a Flp-In T-REx 293 cell line that can be used to selectively generate H2O2 inside peroxisomes in a controlled manner, we provide evidence that PXMP2 is not essential for H2O2 permeation across the peroxisomal membrane, neither in control cells nor in cells lacking PEX11B, a peroxisomal membrane-shaping protein whose yeast homologue facilitates the permeation of molecules up to 400 Da. During the course of this study, we unexpectedly noted that inactivation of PEX11B leads to partial localiza...
Source: Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) Biomembranes - Category: Biochemistry Source Type: research