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Translocator Protein 2 Is Involved in Cholesterol Redistribution during Erythropoiesis
Authors:Jinjiang Fan  Malena B Rone  and Vassilios Papadopoulos
Institution:From the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Center and the Departments of Medicine, Biochemistry, and Pharmacology and Therapeutics, McGill University, Montréal, Québec H3A 1A4, Canada
Abstract:Translocator protein (TSPO) is an 18-kDa cholesterol- and drug-binding protein conserved from bacteria to humans. While surveying for Tspo-like genes, we identified its paralogous gene, Tspo2, encoding an evolutionarily conserved family of proteins that arose by gene duplications before the divergence of avians and mammals. Comparative analysis of Tspo1 and Tspo2 functions suggested that Tspo2 has become subfunctionalized, typical of duplicated genes, characterized by the loss of diagnostic drug ligand-binding but retention of cholesterol-binding properties, hematopoietic tissue- and erythroid cell-specific distribution, and subcellular endoplasmic reticulum and nuclear membrane localization. Expression of Tspo2 in erythroblasts is strongly correlated with the down-regulation of the enzymes involved in cholesterol biosynthesis. Overexpression of TSPO2 in erythroid cells resulted in the redistribution of intracellular free cholesterol, an essential step in nucleus expulsion during erythrocyte maturation. Taken together, these data identify the TSPO2 family of proteins as mediators of cholesterol redistribution-dependent erythroblast maturation during mammalian erythropoiesis.Translocator protein (TSPO)2 is an 18-kDa protein that was previously known as PBR (peripheral type benzodiazepine receptor) and represents a gene family evolutionarily conserved from bacteria to humans (1). In bacteria, TSPO is the tryptophan-rich sensory protein, an integral membrane protein that acts as a negative regulator of the expression of specific photosynthesis genes in response to oxygen and light (2). It is involved in the efflux of porphyrin intermediates from the cell, and several conserved aromatic residues within TSPO are thought to be involved in binding porphyrin intermediates (2). TSPO of bacterial origin has been shown to have the same ligand binding properties as mammalian TSPO proteins (3). In addition to the binding of porphyrin and heme, mammalian TSPO can replace the activity of its bacterial homologs (2, 4, 5). Rat TSPO was shown to retain its structure within the bacterial outer membrane, to functionally substitute for the bacterial homolog, and to act in a manner similar to TSPO in the outer mitochondrial membrane (6). Therefore, it is conceivable that some conserved functions of the Tspo genes within a cell are maintained from bacteria to plants and to mammals.In mammals, the biological significance of TSPO has been studied for decades, and TSPO has been shown to be involved in a variety of cellular functions, including cholesterol transport and steroid hormone synthesis, mitochondrial respiration, permeability transition pore opening, apoptosis, and proliferation (710). Moreover, its expression correlates with certain pathological conditions such as cancer and endocrine and neurological diseases (8). Although some conserved cellular functions of Tspo are shared from bacteria to mammals, such as cholesterol-binding and transport, their biological significance seems to have adapted to serve specific functions critical for each organism. For instance, cholesterol transport into mitochondria is the rate-determining step in steroidogenesis (8, 11). TSPO serves the similar function in plants (12), insects (13), and mammals (14). However, the appearance of the drug, such as the benzodiazepine diazepam, binding sites on TSPO evolved later than the brain-specific γ-aminobutyric acid A receptor benzodiazepine binding sites (15), although drug binding was observed in both the plant and insect TSPOs (12, 13). Thus, throughout evolution, mammalian Tspo genes have exhibited extraordinary plasticity, a valuable trait to be further exploited.We sought to reveal the mechanisms controlling the molecular evolution of Tspo and Tspo-like genes and the ligand binding sites in recently sequenced mammalian and other eukaryotic genomes and characterize the relationships and potential functional similarities in cholesterol synthesis, trafficking, and cholesterol-supported steroidogenesis between different Tspo genes. During these studies, we identified a new family of Tspo-like genes involved in cholesterol trafficking and redistribution, which is linked to erythropoiesis and probably to a new mechanism of erythroblast maturation.
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