Miro1 – the Missing Link to Peroxisome Motility
Castro, I; Schrader, M
Date: 25 September 2018
Article
Journal
Communicative and Integrative Biology
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Peroxisomes are ubiquitous, highly dynamic, multifunctional compartments in eukaryotic
cells, which perform key roles in cellular lipid metabolism and redox balance. Like other
membrane-bound organelles, peroxisomes must move in the cellular landscape to
perform localized functions, interact with other organelles and to properly ...
Peroxisomes are ubiquitous, highly dynamic, multifunctional compartments in eukaryotic
cells, which perform key roles in cellular lipid metabolism and redox balance. Like other
membrane-bound organelles, peroxisomes must move in the cellular landscape to
perform localized functions, interact with other organelles and to properly distribute
during cell division. However, our current knowledge of peroxisome motility in
mammalian cells is still very limited. Recently, three independent studies have identified
Miro1 as a regulator of peroxisome motility in mammalian cells. In these studies, the
authors show that Miro1 is targeted to peroxisomes in several cell lines, in a process that
relies on its interaction with the peroxisomal chaperone Pex19. Interestingly, however,
different conclusions are drawn about which Miro1 isoforms are targeted to peroxisomes,
how it interacts with Pex19 and most importantly, the type of motility Miro1 is regulating.
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