What is the mechanism for intracellular sorting of proteins via piggybacking?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the intracellular sorting mechanism where one protein is transported by another, often referred to as "piggybacking." Participants explore the terminology and concepts related to this mechanism, including the role of chaperones and trafficking.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Technical explanation

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants propose that the term "piggyback" or "piggybacking" describes the mechanism where one protein rides along with another to reach its destination.
  • Others argue that "chaperone" is a more appropriate term, as it refers to proteins that assist in the folding and transport of other proteins, although it may not specifically denote the piggybacking mechanism.
  • A participant mentions that "trafficking" is the broader term encompassing piggybacking as a specific type of transport mechanism.
  • There is a discussion about the distinction between chaperoning, which may involve folding and error correction, and the act of transporting proteins directly.
  • Some participants express confusion over the terminology and its usage in literature, noting that "piggybacking" may be more colloquial compared to "trafficking."
  • One participant highlights that not all transport proteins should be classified as chaperones, suggesting a more nuanced classification based on their functions.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants do not reach a consensus on the terminology, with multiple competing views on whether "piggybacking," "chaperoning," or "trafficking" is the most accurate descriptor for the mechanism discussed.

Contextual Notes

There are limitations in the definitions and distinctions made by participants, particularly regarding the roles of chaperones versus transport mechanisms, and the potential overlap in terminology used in different contexts.

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What is the intracellular sorting mechanism called where a protein is transported by another protein?

Piggy back/ Piggyback

or

Piggy bag/ Piggybag?
 
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Is this just an English word question?

Piggy-back is a child's term for being carried on someone's back. "Take me piggy-back daddy!". So it's universally used for any situation where one entity "carries" another.
 
Protein that guide other protein are called chaperon. It probably called chaperoning
 
Last edited:
Originally posted by iansmith
Protein that guide other protein are called chaperon. It probably called chaperoning
You are right, but that is something else. Chaperone is not a mechanism for directing a protein to the lysosome or ER etc.

I guess selfAdjoint would be right, that it is piggy-back. I was confused, since both sound the same and I thought it would be a small bag carried on the back, so a piggy bag :P

Basically a protein has the signal sequence that allows it to be targeted to an organelle, a second protein lacks any signal sequence and thus is targeted by 'hopping on the back' of the other protein and hitching a ride to the appropriate organelle.
 
thanks for the help btw!
 
You are right, but that is something else. Chaperone is not a mechanism for directing a protein to the lysosome or ER etc.

It is, this is the definition of a chaperone

http://www.geneed.com/glossary/c/index.html
A group of proteins that guide other proteins during their synthesis and assembly at the ribosome and their subsequent transport to their site of action

http://www.books.md/C/dic/chaperone.php
Cytoplasmic proteins of both prokaryotes and eukaryotes that bind to nascent or unfolded polypeptides and ensure correct folding or transport. Chaperone proteins do not covalently bind to their targets and do not form part of the finished product. Heat-shock proteins are an important sub set of chaperones. Three major families are recognised, the chaperonins (groEL and hsp60), the hsp70 family and the hsp90 family. Outside these major families are other proteins with similar functions including nucleoplasmin, secB and T-cell receptor associated protein.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Ok, so chaperone is the function of a protein that escorts another protein and the mechanism by which it works is piggy-back?
 
Piggybacking appears to be more than a laymen word rather than the actual word use. Very article use piggybacking as the mecahnism for chaperoning.

From what I just read, piggybacking could be the transport of protein that are not newly synthesis and are staying in the cytoplasm. For example, protein that are activated after the signal transduction cascade and act in the on the DNA.
 
Originally posted by iansmith
Piggybacking appears to be more than a laymen word rather than the actual word use. Very article use piggybacking as the mecahnism for chaperoning.

From what I just read, piggybacking could be the transport of protein that are not newly synthesis and are staying in the cytoplasm. For example, protein that are activated after the signal transduction cascade and act in the on the DNA.
Oh, really. So chaperoning is the word to be used.. then I learned something new today since the word piggyback has been the only term that I heard :) no wonder I didn't find much on google. Thanks Ian.
 
  • #10
Originally posted by Monique
Oh, really. So chaperoning is the word to be used.. then I learned something new today since the word piggyback has been the only term that I heard :) no wonder I didn't find much on google. Thanks Ian.

Some biologist have this weird things, they create new word or expression for process that have been identify or are similar but not identical.
 
  • #11
Originally posted by Monique
What is the intracellular sorting mechanism called where a protein is transported by another protein?

Piggy back/ Piggyback

or

Piggy bag/ Piggybag?

According to my molecular prof, this is referred to as trafficing. Piggybacking is is specific "type" of trafficing. We just covered the topic this week or I would have chimed in sooner.
 
  • #12
Good, so it is not the crazy dutch that are using the terminology :P you aren't in Holland, MI are you?? :wink:

So yeah, piggybacking is when a protein hops on and hitches a ride. Probably when it doesn't have a signal sequence of its own, so it interacts with a protein that does and gets to its destination that way.

But apparently chaperoning is the correct term.
 
  • #13
Originally posted by Monique


But apparently chaperoning is the correct term.
Chaperoning could also imply folding and error fixing (not transporting directy). As I know chaperons basically help proteins in transporting through the membranes by defolding them on the entrance and properly folding them on exit, and keeping their proper 3D structure during the transport in the cell. Beside that family of chaperones include HSP molecules (mainly), and you know their purpose.
 
  • #14
Yep, I know hsp

I also always thought that chaperoning just meant accompanying.
 
  • #15
Well, I think that you shouldn’t call all transport proteins and other carriers chaperones, I was thinking and remembered some paper I’ve wrote (including some HSP’s) and chaperons were strictly divided to:
e.g. HSP 70 - chaperons
e.g. HSP 60 + HSP 10 complex – chaperonines

And none of them is strictly a carrier, first one's are used for folding/defolding during the transport, and second for defolding missfolded, and prpoper folding.

So trafficin/piggybacking i maybe more matching :)
 

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