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1.
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the COX5a and COX5b genes encode two forms of cytochrome c oxidase subunit V, Va and Vb. We report here that heme increases COX5a expression and decreases COX5b expression and that the HAP2 and REO1 genes are involved in positive regulation of COX5a and negative regulation of COX5b, respectively. Heme regulation of COX5a and COX5b may dictate which subunit V isoform is available for assembly into cytochrome c oxidase under conditions of high- and low-oxygen tension.  相似文献   

2.
Previous studies have demonstrated that the mitochondrial respiratory chain and cytochrome c oxidase participate in oxygen sensing and the induction of some hypoxic nuclear genes in eukaryotes. In addition, it has been proposed that mitochondrially-generated reactive oxygen and nitrogen species function as signals in a signaling pathway for the induction of hypoxic genes. To gain insight concerning this pathway, we have looked at changes in the functionality of the yeast respiratory chain as cells experience a shift from normoxia to anoxia. These studies have revealed that yeast cells retain the ability to respire at normoxic levels for up to 4 h after a shift and that the mitochondrial cytochrome levels drop rapidly to 30--50% of their normoxic levels and the turnover rate of cytochrome c oxidase (COX) increases during this shift. The increase in COX turnover rate cannot be explained by replacing the aerobic isoform, Va, of cytochrome c oxidase subunit V with the more active hypoxic isoform, Vb. We have also found that mitochondria retain the ability to respire, albeit at reduced levels, in anoxic cells, indicating that yeast cells maintain a functional mitochondrial respiratory chain in the absence of oxygen. This raises the intriguing possibility that the mitochondrial respiratory chain has a previously unexplored role in anoxic cells and may function with an alternative electron acceptor when oxygen is unavailable.  相似文献   

3.
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the COX5a and COX5b genes constitute a small gene family that encodes two forms of cytochrome c oxidase subunit V, Va and Vb, either of which can provide a function essential for cytochrome c oxidase activity and respiration. In aerobically grown wild-type yeast cells, Va is the predominant form of subunit V. The COX5b gene alone does not produce enough Vb to support a respiration rate sufficient to allow growth on nonfermentable carbon sources. By selecting for mutations that increase the respiratory capacity of a strain deleted for COX5a, we have identified a gene that is involved in negative regulation of COX5b expression under aerobic growth conditions. Each of four independently isolated reo1 mutations are shown to be recessive, unlinked to COX5b, but dependent on COX5b for phenotypic expression. The mutations define a single complementation and linkage group: designated as REO1 for regulator of expression of oxidase. reo1 mutations increase expression of COX5b in aerobically grown cells, but not in anaerobically grown cells, where expression is already elevated. These mutations have no effect on COX5a, the other member of this small gene family which is positively regulated by heme and oxygen. The REO1 gene does play a role in repression of ANB1, a gene that is normally repressed under aerobic but not anaerobic conditions. Neither rox1 or rox3 mutations, which have previously been shown to increase ANB1 expression, are in the same complementation group as reo1 mutations.  相似文献   

4.
5.
The COX6 gene encodes subunit VI of cytochrome c oxidase. Previously, this gene and its mRNAs were characterized, and its expression has been shown to be subject to glucose repression/derepression. In this study we have examined the effects of heme and the HAP1 (CYP1) and HAP2 genes on the expression of COX6. By quantitating COX6 RNA levels and assaying beta-galactosidase activity in yeast cells carrying COX6-lacZ fusion genes, we have found that COX6 is regulated positively by heme and HAP2, but is unaffected by HAP1. Through 5' deletion analysis we have also found that the effects of heme and HAP2 on COX6 are mediated by sequences between 135 and 590 base pairs upstream of its initiation codon. These findings identify COX6 as the fourth respiratory protein gene that is known to be regulated positively by heme and HAP2. The other three, CYC1, COX4, and COX5a, encode iso-1-cytochrome c, cytochrome c oxidase subunit IV, and an isolog, Va, of cytochrome c oxidase subunit V, respectively. Thus, it appears that the biogenesis of two interacting proteins, cytochrome c and cytochrome c oxidase, in the mitochondrial respiratory chain, are under the control of common factors.  相似文献   

6.
Pamela S. David 《BBA》2005,1709(2):169-180
Previous studies have demonstrated that the mitochondrial respiratory chain and cytochrome c oxidase participate in oxygen sensing and the induction of some hypoxic nuclear genes in eukaryotes. In addition, it has been proposed that mitochondrially-generated reactive oxygen and nitrogen species function as signals in a signaling pathway for the induction of hypoxic genes. To gain insight concerning this pathway, we have looked at changes in the functionality of the yeast respiratory chain as cells experience a shift from normoxia to anoxia. These studies have revealed that yeast cells retain the ability to respire at normoxic levels for up to 4 h after a shift and that the mitochondrial cytochrome levels drop rapidly to 30-50% of their normoxic levels and the turnover rate of cytochrome c oxidase (COX) increases during this shift. The increase in COX turnover rate cannot be explained by replacing the aerobic isoform, Va, of cytochrome c oxidase subunit V with the more active hypoxic isoform, Vb. We have also found that mitochondria retain the ability to respire, albeit at reduced levels, in anoxic cells, indicating that yeast cells maintain a functional mitochondrial respiratory chain in the absence of oxygen. This raises the intriguing possibility that the mitochondrial respiratory chain has a previously unexplored role in anoxic cells and may function with an alternative electron acceptor when oxygen is unavailable.  相似文献   

7.
8.
The immunohistochemical reaction of monoclonal as well as polyclonal antibodies against cytochrome c oxidase (COX) subunits with serial sections of normal human skeletal muscle was investigated. The stronger reactivity of polyclonal antibodies to COX subunits II-III and VIIbc with type I as compared to type II fibres, correlated well with the higher histochemical reactivity of NADH dehydrogenase, succinate dehydrogenase and cytochrome c oxidase in type I fibres. In contrast an almost exclusive reaction of a monoclonal antibody against subunit IV with type I fibre and a preponderant reaction of a polyclonal antibody against subunits Vab with type II fibres was obtained. Antibodies against subunits I, Vb and VIc did not reveal a fibre-type-specific reactivity. The data indicate in human muscle the occurrence of fibre type-specific isozymes of cytochrome c oxidase differing in subunits IV and Va or Vb.  相似文献   

9.
Summary The immunohistochemical reaction of monoclonal as well as polyclonal antibodies against cytochrome c oxidase (COX) subunits with serial sections of normal human skeletal muscle was investigated. The stronger reactivity of polyclonal antibodies to COX subunits II–III and VIIbc with type I as compared to type II fibres, correlated well with the higher histochemical reactivity of NADH dehydrogenase, succinate dehydrogenase and cytochrome c oxidase in type I fibres. In contrast an almost exclusive reaction of a monoclonal antibody against subunit IV with type I fibre and a preponderan reaction of a polyclonal antibody against subunits Vab with type II fibres was obtained. Antibodies against subuntis I, Vb and VIc did not reveal a fibre-type-specific reactivity. The data indicate in human muscle the occurrence of fibre type-specific isozymes of cytochrome c oxidase differing in subunits IV and Va or Vb.  相似文献   

10.
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12.
A DNA polymorphism of the nuclear-encoded subunit Va of the human cytochrome c oxidase (COX), a mitochondrial respiratory enzyme, is reported. No polymorphism was detected in genes for the subunits IV and Vb of the same enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
We have cloned and sequenced COX12, the nuclear gene for subunit VIb of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cytochrome c oxidase. This subunit, which was previously not found in cytochrome c oxidase purified from S. cerevisiae, has a deduced amino acid sequence which is 41% identical to the sequences of subunits VIb of bovine and human cytochrome c oxidases. The chromosomal copy of COX12 was replaced with a plasmid-derived copy of COX12, in which the coding region for the suspected cytochrome oxidase subunit was replaced with the yeast URA3 gene. The resulting Ura+ deletion strain grew poorly at room temperature and was unable to grow at 37 degrees C on ethanol/glycerol medium, whereas growth was normal at both temperatures on dextrose. This temperature-dependent, petite phenotype of the deletion strain was complemented to wild-type growth with a single copy plasmid carrying COX12. Cytochrome c oxidase activity in mitochondrial membranes from the cox12 deletion strain is decreased to 5-15% of that in membranes from the wild-type parent, and this activity is restored to normal when the cox12 deletion strain is complemented by the plasmid-borne COX12. Optical spectra of mitochondrial membranes from the cox12 deletion strain revealed that optically detectable cytochrome c oxidase is assembled at room temperature and at 37 degrees C, although the heme a + a3 absorption is diminished approximately 50%. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the protein encoded by COX12 is identical to the N-terminal sequence of a subunit found in yeast cytochrome c oxidase purified by a new procedure (Taanman, J.-W., and Capaldi, R. A. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 22481-22485). We conclude that COX12 encodes a subunit of yeast cytochrome c oxidase which is essential during assembly for full cytochrome c oxidase activity but apparently can be removed after the oxidase is assembled, with retention of oxidase activity. This is the first instance in which deletion of a subunit of cytochrome c oxidase results in assembly of optically detectable cytochrome c oxidase but having markedly diminished activity.  相似文献   

14.
Reversible infantile respiratory chain deficiency is characterised by spontaneous recovery of mitochondrial myopathy in infants. We studied whether a physiological isoform switch of nuclear cytochrome c oxidase subunits contributes to the age-dependent manifestation and spontaneous recovery in reversible mitochondrial disease. Some nuclear-encoded subunits of cytochrome c oxidase are present as tissue-specific isoforms. Isoforms of subunits COX6A and COX7A expressed in heart and skeletal muscle are different from isoforms expressed in the liver, kidney and brain. Furthermore, in skeletal muscle both the heart and liver isoforms of subunit COX7A have been demonstrated with variable levels, indicating that the tissue-specific expression of nuclear-encoded subunits could provide a basis for the fine-tuning of cytochrome c oxidase activity to the specific metabolic needs of the different tissues.We demonstrate a developmental isoform switch of COX6A and COX7A subunits in human and mouse skeletal muscle. While the liver type isoforms are more present soon after birth, the heart/muscle isoforms gradually increase around 3 months of age in infants, 4 weeks of age in mice, and these isoforms persist in muscle throughout life. Our data in follow-up biopsies of patients with reversible infantile respiratory chain deficiency indicate that the physiological isoform switch does not contribute to the clinical manifestation and to the spontaneous recovery of this disease. However, understanding developmental changes of the different cytochrome c oxidase isoforms may have implications for other mitochondrial diseases.This article is part of a Directed Issue entitled: Energy Metabolism Disorders and Therapies.  相似文献   

15.
Subunit VIIa of yeast cytochrome c oxidase is a small (59 amino acids) protein of the inner mitochondrial membrane that lacks a cleavable amino-terminal presequence. To identify regions within this polypeptide that are essential for its import, gene fusions were constructed using a leader peptide substitution vector (pLPS) developed in this laboratory (Glaser, S. M., Trueblood, C. E., Dircks, L. K., Poyton, R. O., and Cumsky, M. G. (1988) J. Cell. Biochem. 36, 275-287). In this vector, oligonucleotide sequences encoding all or part of subunit VIIa were fused in-frame with the coding region of mature cytochrome c oxidase subunit Va. The plasmid pLPS is ideal for assaying protein sequences for their ability to direct mitochondrial import in vivo since subunit Va's leader peptide is essential for import and because subunit V is required for cytochrome c oxidase activity and respiration. Strains containing these fusions but lacking both subunit V genes (COX5a and COX5b) were analyzed to determine whether the chimeric protein is directed to mitochondria. Our findings indicate that the amino-terminal 17 amino acids of subunit VIIa are sufficient to localize subunit Va to the mitochondrion and that a 6-amino acid-long region within the amino terminus (Gly8-Arg13) is essential. In addition, some import (approximately 10% of wild type) is observed with the highly charged carboxyl terminus of subunit VIIa, suggesting that the subunit may contain redundancy in its import information.  相似文献   

16.
Subunit Vb of mammalian cytochrome c oxidase (COX; EC 1.9.3.1) is encoded by a nuclear gene and assembled with the other 12 COX subunits encoded in both mitochondrial and nuclear DNA. We have cloned the gene for human COX subunit Vb (COX5B) and determined the exon-intron structure by both hybridization analysis and DNA sequencing. The gene contains five exons and four introns; the four coding exons span a region of approximately 2.4 kb. The 5' end of the COX5B gene is GC-rich and contains many HpaII sites. Genomic Southern blot analysis of human DNA probed with the human COX Vb cDNA identified eight restriction fragments containing COX Vb-related sequences that were mapped to different chromosomes with panels of human x Chinese hamster somatic cell hybrids. Because only one of these fragments hybridized with a 210-bp probe from intron 4, we conclude that there is a single expressed gene for COX subunit Vb in the human genome. We have mapped this gene to chromosome 2, region cen-q13.  相似文献   

17.
The gene for yeast cytochrome c oxidase subunit V, COX5, has been isolated from a Saccharomyces cerevisiae DNA library by complementation of a cytochrome c oxidase subunit V mutant, JM28. One complementing plasmid, YEp13-511, with a DNA insert of 4.8 kilobase pairs, has been characterized in detail. This plasmid restores respiratory competency in JM28, results in increased cytochrome c oxidase activity and a new form of subunit V in JM28 mitochondria, and is capable of selecting mRNA for subunit V. These results indicate that YEp13-511 carries the COX5 gene and that the subunit V encoded by this plasmid gene is capable of entering the mitochondrion and assembling into a functional holocytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

18.
Cytochrome c oxidase was isolated from pig, bovine, rat and human tissues including liver, heart, diaphragm and kidney. The native and the sodium-dodecyl-sulfate (SDS)-dissociated enzymes were labelled under optimal conditions with N-ethyl-[2,3-14C]maleimide before and after reduction with dithiothreitol, separated into 13 subunits by SDS gel electrophoresis and the radioactive bands were visualized by fluorography. In some cases the radioactive bands were cut out and counted. All isozymes were labelled in subunits I, III, Va and VIIb, and in subunit II after reduction. Labelling of subunit Vb was equivocal, and in no case were subunits IV and VIc labelled. All other subunits were labelled tissue-specifically and/or species-specifically. No differences were found between labelling of the native and SDS-dissociated enzyme. By relating the molar amount of bound N-ethylmaleimide to the known amount of cysteines in subunits of bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase, the percentage of -SH group reactivity was calculated. Only the cysteine of subunit Va was found to be 100% reactive. The distinct and different reactivity of subunit VIIb as compared to subunits VIIa and VIIc clearly establishes this polypeptide as an independent subunit of mammalian cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

19.
We report the first missense mutation in the mtDNA gene for subunit II of cytochrome c oxidase (COX). The mutation was identified in a 14-year-old boy with a proximal myopathy and lactic acidosis. Muscle histochemistry and mitochondrial respiratory-chain enzymology demonstrated a marked reduction in COX activity. Immunohistochemistry and immunoblot analyses with COX subunit-specific monoclonal antibodies showed a pattern suggestive of a primary mtDNA defect, most likely involving CO II, for COX subunit II (COX II). mtDNA-sequence analysis demonstrated a novel heteroplasmic T-->A transversion at nucleotide position 7,671 in CO II. This mutation changes a methionine to a lysine residue in the middle of the first N-terminal membrane-spanning region of COX II. The immunoblot studies demonstrated a severe reduction in cross-reactivity, not only for COX II but also for the mtDNA-encoded subunit COX III and for nuclear-encoded subunits Vb, VIa, VIb, and VIc. Steady-state levels of the mtDNA-encoded subunit COX I showed a mild reduction, but spectrophotometric analysis revealed a dramatic decrease in COX I-associated heme a3 levels. These observations suggest that, in the COX protein, a structural association of COX II with COX I is necessary to stabilize the binding of heme a3 to COX I.  相似文献   

20.
Defects of cytochromec oxidase (COX) show remarkable clinical, biochemical, and genetic heterogeneity. Clinically, there are two main groups of disorders, one dominated by muscle involvement, the other by brain dysfunction. Biochemically, the enzyme defect may be confined to one or a few tissues (reflecting the existence of tissue-specific isozymes) or affect all tissues. Immunologically reactive enzyme protein is decreased in some forms of COX deficiency but not in others. Because COX is encoded both by nuclear and by mitochondrial genes, COX deficiencies may be due to mutations of either genome and may offer useful models to study the communication between nuclei and mitochondria. We have isolated full-length cDNA clones encoding human COX subunits IV, Vb, and VIII and a partial-length clone for subunit Va. These clones are being used as probes to analyze the DNA and RNA of patients with COX deficiency.  相似文献   

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