Trap1: mitochondeial homolog of cancer chaperone Hsp90 in regulating mitochondrial fession
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Abstract
Cancer is a polygenic disease and emerges from the deregulation of both genetic and
epigenetic mechanisms. Two hallmarks of cancer, deregulating cellular energetics and evading
apoptosis can be directly associated with mitochondria since mitochondria remain the hot spot
for both. Mitochondria exist in a dynamic state between 'fusion' and 'fission' and these states
regulate several cellular functions including ATP production. High molecular weight heat shock
protein, Hsp90 is identified as a 'cancer chaperone' due to its involvement in regulating the
functions of several cancer related signal transduction molecules. However, its mitochondrial
homologue, TRAP1 does not show cancer associated molecular interactions like Hsp90, but its
enhanced expression in cancer cells did correlate with disease progression. To understand
TRAP1 involvement in regulating the mitochondrial dynamics between fusion and fission, we
examined TRAP1 over expression in comparison with knockdown. We found that TRAP1 over
expression does not kill tumor cells, but induces mitochondrial fission-like structural reorganization.
To
assess
whether
or
not
these
structural
alterations
are
comparable
with
fission,
we
cloned and over expressed fission genes, Fis1, Drp1, and Mff in normal (SRA01 and
HEK293T) and metastatic cancer cells (IMR-32) and examined for cell and mitochondrial
morphology. TRAP1 over expression alone showed enhanced fission compared to individual
fission protein expression suggesting that one or all of the fission proteins requires TRAP1 for
their regulation. Tumor cells showed more sensitivity to TRAP1 over expression compared to
normal cells indicating tumor selective functions. Preliminary studies with protein-protein
interaction suggested that TRAP1 interacts with these proteins however subsequent
experiments need to be performed for further confirmation with respect to type of fission
protein and mapping of the interacting region.
Keywords: Cancer, Mitochondrial dynamics, Heat shock proteins, Hsp90, TRAP1, Mitochondrial
fission proteins
