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1.
The oxidative phosphorylation system contains four respiratory chain complexes that connect the transport of electrons to oxygen with the establishment of an electrochemical gradient over the inner membrane for ATP synthesis. Due to the dual genetic source of the respiratory chain subunits, its assembly requires a tight coordination between nuclear and mitochondrial gene expression machineries. In addition, dedicated assembly factors support the step-by-step addition of catalytic and accessory subunits as well as the acquisition of redox cofactors. Studies in yeast have revealed the basic principles underlying the assembly pathways. In this review, we summarize work on the biogenesis of the bc1 complex or complex III, a central component of the mitochondrial energy conversion system.  相似文献   

2.
Complex I (NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase) is the largest multimeric enzyme complex of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, which is responsible for electron transport and the generation of a proton gradient across the mitochondrial inner membrane to drive ATP production. Eukaryotic complex I consists of 14 conserved subunits, which are homologous to the bacterial subunits, and more than 26 accessory subunits. In mammals, complex I consists of 45 subunits, which must be assembled correctly to form the properly functioning mature complex. Complex I dysfunction is the most common oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) disorder in humans and defects in the complex I assembly process are often observed. This assembly process has been difficult to characterize because of its large size, the lack of a high resolution structure for complex I, and its dual control by nuclear and mitochondrial DNA. However, in recent years, some of the atomic structure of the complex has been resolved and new insights into complex I assembly have been generated. Furthermore, a number of proteins have been identified as assembly factors for complex I biogenesis and many patients carrying mutations in genes associated with complex I deficiency and mitochondrial diseases have been discovered. Here, we review the current knowledge of the eukaryotic complex I assembly process and new insights from the identification of novel assembly factors. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Biogenesis/Assembly of Respiratory Enzyme Complexes.  相似文献   

3.
Complex I (CI) is the largest enzyme of the mammalian mitochondrial respiratory chain. The biogenesis of the complex is a very complex process due to its large size and number of subunits (45 subunits). The situation is further complicated due to the fact that its subunits have a double genomic origin, as seven of them are encoded by the mitochondrial DNA. Understanding of the assembly process and characterization of the involved factors has advanced very much in the last years. However, until now, a key part of the process, that is, how and at which step the mitochondrially encoded CI subunits (ND subunits) are incorporated in the CI assembly process, was not known. Analyses of several mouse cell lines mutated for three ND subunits allowed us to determine the importance of each one for complex assembly/stability and that there are five different steps within the assembly pathway in which some mitochondrially encoded CI subunit is incorporated.Complex I (CI) (NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase; EC 1.6.5.3) is one of the main electron entry points in the mitochondrial respiratory electron transport chain catalyzing the oxidation of NADH to reduce ubiquinone to ubiquinol (31, 39, 40), contributing to the proton motive force to synthesize ATP by the process called oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS).CI assembly is a difficult problem to address due to the large size of the complex and its dual genomic nature, as 7 out of its 45 subunits are encoded by the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) (10, 11). Until very recently, mammalian CI assembly was explained using two different and apparently contradictory models. One model was proposed by following the time course of formation of CI intermediates in human cells in culture once mitochondrial protein synthesis had recovered after its inhibition by doxycycline (36). Based on these observations, human CI was proposed to be assembled through two different modules corresponding to the membrane and peripheral arms. The other model was proposed after analysis of a cohort of four CI-deficient patients in which seven putative assembly intermediates containing a combination of both peripheral- and membrane arm subunits were identified. Thus, an assembly pathway in which the peripheral- and membrane arm subassemblies came together before the completion of each of the arms was proposed (4). However, the most recent studies have refined the previous models and propose an overlapping view of the process. One study, by green fluorescent protein (GFP) tagging of the NDUFS3 subunit, identified six peripheral-arm intermediates. The second and third smaller NDUFS3-containing subassemblies were accumulated and could not advance into higher-molecular-mass species when mitochondrial protein synthesis was inhibited, thus determining the entry point of the mitochondrially encoded subunits in the CI assembly pathway (37). The most recent study analyzed the incorporation of the mitochondrial subunits in a time course to the fully assembled CI and, on the other hand, the incorporation of the nuclear subunits by importing them into isolated mitochondria (24). Although these two models differ in the order in which some subunits are incorporated, they agree on the general human CI assembly pathway, which takes place via evolutionarily conserved modular subassemblies (14, 25, 28, 37).However, the specific entry points of all the mtDNA-encoded CI subunits (ND subunits) in the CI assembly pathway and their roles in the stability of the complex remained to be clarified. Structural studies related to mutations in the ND subunits in pathological cases have given some hints as to the importance of each of them for CI assembly/stability. In this case, defects in specific ND subunits do not have the same effect: ND1, ND4, and ND6 seem to be fundamental to CI assembly, while ND3 and ND5 are important for its activity but not for assembly. On the other hand, mutations in ND2 alter CI assembly, with abnormal intermediate accumulation (19).In this article, we present new insights into the roles of the ND subunits by using mouse cells deficient for ND4, ND6, and a combination of ND6 and ND5. This study has allowed us to propose the five different entry points by which the mtDNA-encoded subunits are sequentially incorporated into the CI assembly pathway, completing the current view of the process. We conclude that ND4 and ND6 are required for the proper function and assembly of CI, although at different degrees due to their different entry points and roles in the CI assembly pathway.  相似文献   

4.
The half-ABC transporter Mdl1 is localized in the inner membrane of mitochondria and mediates the export of peptides generated upon proteolysis of mitochondrial proteins. The physiological role of the peptides released from mitochondria is currently not understood. Here, we have analyzed the oligomeric state of Mdl1 in the inner membrane and demonstrate nucleotide-dependent binding to the F(1)F(0)-ATP synthase. Mdl1 forms homo-oligomeric, presumably dimeric complexes in the presence of ATP, but was found in association with the F(1)F(0)-ATP synthase at low ATP levels. Mdl1 binds membrane-embedded parts of the ATP synthase complex after the assembly of the F(1) and F(0) moieties. Although independent of Mdl1 activity, complex formation is impaired upon inhibition of the F(1)F(0)-ATP synthase with oligomycin or N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide. These results are consistent with an activation of Mdl1 upon dissociation from the ATP synthase and suggest a link of peptide export from mitochondria to the activity of the F(1)F(0)-ATP synthase and the cellular energy metabolism.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract

Succinate dehydrogenase (or complex II; SDH) is a heterotetrameric protein complex that links the tribarboxylic acid cycle with the electron transport chain. SDH is composed of four nuclear-encoded subunits that must translocate independently to the mitochondria and assemble into a mature protein complex embedded in the inner mitochondrial membrane. Recently, it has become clear that failure to assemble functional SDH complexes can result in cancer and neurodegenerative syndromes. The effort to thoroughly elucidate the SDH assembly pathway has resulted in the discovery of four subunit-specific assembly factors that aid in the maturation of individual subunits and support the assembly of the intact complex. This review will focus on these assembly factors and assess the contribution of each factor to the assembly of SDH. Finally, we propose a model of the SDH assembly pathway that incorporates all extant data.  相似文献   

6.
Mitochondrial F1Fo-ATP synthase complexes do not exist as physically independent entities but rather form dimeric and possibly oligomeric complexes in the inner mitochondrial membrane. Stable dimerization of two F1Fo-monomeric complexes involves the physical association of two membrane-embedded Fo-sectors. Previously, formation of the ATP synthase dimeric-oligomeric network was demonstrated to play a critical role in modulating the morphology of the mitochondrial inner membrane. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, subunit e (Su e) of the Fo-sector plays a central role in supporting ATP synthase dimerization. The Su e protein is anchored to the inner membrane via a hydrophobic region located at its N-terminal end. The hydrophilic C-terminal region of Su e resides in the intermembrane space and contains a conserved coiled-coil motif. In the present study, we focused on characterizing the importance of these regions for the function of Su e. We created a number of C-terminal-truncated derivatives of the Su e protein and expressed them in the Su e null yeast mutant. Mitochondria were isolated from the resulting transformant strains, and a number of functions of Su e were analyzed. Our results indicate that the N-terminal hydrophobic region plays important roles in the Su e-dependent processes of mitochondrial DNA maintenance, modulation of mitochondrial morphology, and stabilization of the dimer-specific Fo subunits, subunits g and k. Furthermore, we show that the C-terminal coiled-coil region of Su e functions to stabilize the dimeric form of detergent-solubilized ATP synthase complexes. Finally, we propose a model to explain how Su e supports the assembly of the ATP synthase dimers-oligomers in the mitochondrial membrane.  相似文献   

7.
Mitochondrial F1Fo‐ATP synthase generates the bulk of cellular ATP. This molecular machine assembles from nuclear‐ and mitochondria‐encoded subunits. Whereas chaperones for formation of the matrix‐exposed hexameric F1‐ATPase core domain have been identified, insight into how the nuclear‐encoded F1‐domain assembles with the membrane‐embedded Fo‐region is lacking. Here we identified the INA complex (INAC) in the inner membrane of mitochondria as an assembly factor involved in this process. Ina22 and Ina17 are INAC constituents that physically associate with the F1‐module and peripheral stalk, but not with the assembled F1Fo‐ATP synthase. Our analyses show that loss of Ina22 and Ina17 specifically impairs formation of the peripheral stalk that connects the catalytic F1‐module to the membrane embedded Fo‐domain. We conclude that INAC represents a matrix‐exposed inner membrane protein complex that facilitates peripheral stalk assembly and thus promotes a key step in the biogenesis of mitochondrial F1Fo‐ATP synthase.  相似文献   

8.
Vacuolar-type H(+)-ATPase (V-ATPase or V-type ATPase) is a multisubunit complex comprised of a water-soluble V(1) complex, responsible for ATP hydrolysis, and a membrane-embedded V(o) complex, responsible for proton translocation. The V(1) complex of Thermus thermophilus V-ATPase has the subunit composition of A(3)B(3)DF, in which the A and B subunits form a hexameric ring structure. A central stalk composed of the D and F subunits penetrates the ring. In this study, we investigated the pathway for assembly of the V(1) complex by reconstituting the V(1) complex from the monomeric A and B subunits and DF subcomplex in vitro. Assembly of these components into the V(1) complex required binding of ATP to the A subunit, although hydrolysis of ATP is not necessary. In the absence of the DF subcomplex, the A and B monomers assembled into A(1)B(1) and A(3)B(3) subcomplexes in an ATP binding-dependent manner, suggesting that ATP binding-dependent interaction between the A and B subunits is a crucial step of assembly into V(1) complex. Kinetic analysis of assembly of the A and B monomers into the A(1)B(1) heterodimer using fluorescence resonance energy transfer indicated that the A subunit binds ATP prior to binding the B subunit. Kinetics of binding of a fluorescent ADP analog, N-methylanthraniloyl ADP (mant-ADP), to the monomeric A subunit also supported the rapid nucleotide binding to the A subunit.  相似文献   

9.
The majority of mitochondrial proteins are synthesized with amino-terminal signal sequences. The presequence translocase of the inner membrane (TIM23 complex) mediates the import of these preproteins. The essential TIM23 core complex closely cooperates with partner protein complexes like the presequence translocase-associated import motor and the respiratory chain. The inner mitochondrial membrane also contains a large number of metabolite carriers, but their association with preprotein translocases has been controversial. We performed a comprehensive analysis of the TIM23 interactome based on stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture. Subsequent biochemical studies on identified partner proteins showed that the mitochondrial ADP/ATP carrier associates with the membrane-embedded core of the TIM23 complex in a stoichiometric manner, revealing an unexpected connection of mitochondrial protein biogenesis to metabolite transport. Our data indicate that direct TIM23-AAC coupling may support preprotein import into mitochondria when respiratory activity is low.  相似文献   

10.
Key to mitochondrial activities is the maintenance of mitochondrial morphology, specifically cristae structures formed by the invagination of the inner membrane that are enriched in proteins of the electron transport chain. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae , these cristae folds are a result of the membrane fusion activities of Mgm1p and the membrane‐bending properties of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) synthase oligomerization. An additional protein linked to mitochondrial morphology is Pcp1p, a serine protease responsible for the proteolytic processing of Mgm1p. Here, we have used hydroxylamine‐based random mutagenesis to identify amino acids important for Pcp1p peptidase activity. Using this approach we have isolated five single amino acid mutants that exhibit respiratory growth defects that correlate with loss of mitochondrial genome stability. Reduced Pcp1p protease activity was confirmed by immunoblotting with the accumulation of improperly processed Mgm1p. Ultra‐structural analysis of mitochondrial morphology in these mutants found a varying degree of defects in cristae organization. However, not all of the mutants presented with decreased ATP synthase complex assembly as determined by blue native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Together, these data suggest that there is a threshold level of processed Mgm1p required to maintain ATP synthase super‐complex assembly and mitochondrial cristae organization.  相似文献   

11.
Complex I (NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase) is the first and largest multimeric complex of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. Human complex I comprises seven subunits encoded by mitochondrial DNA and 38 nuclear-encoded subunits that are assembled together in a process that is only partially understood. To date, mutations causing complex I deficiency have been described in all 14 core subunits, five supernumerary subunits, and four assembly factors. We describe complex I deficiency caused by mutation of the putative complex I assembly factor C20orf7. A candidate region for a lethal neonatal form of complex I deficiency was identified by homozygosity mapping of an Egyptian family with one affected child and two affected pregnancies predicted by enzyme-based prenatal diagnosis. The region was confirmed by microcell-mediated chromosome transfer, and 11 candidate genes encoding potential mitochondrial proteins were sequenced. A homozygous missense mutation in C20orf7 segregated with disease in the family. We show that C20orf7 is peripherally associated with the matrix face of the mitochondrial inner membrane and that silencing its expression with RNAi decreases complex I activity. C20orf7 patient fibroblasts showed an almost complete absence of complex I holoenzyme and were defective at an early stage of complex I assembly, but in a manner distinct from the assembly defects caused by mutations in the assembly factor NDUFAF1. Our results indicate that C20orf7 is crucial in the assembly of complex I and that mutations in C20orf7 cause mitochondrial disease.  相似文献   

12.
The mitochondrial ATP synthase (F(1)-F(0) complex) of Saccharomces cerevisiae is a composite of different structural and functional units that jointly couple ATP synthesis and hydrolysis to proton transfer across the inner membrane. In organello, pulse labelling and pulse-chase experiments have enabled us to track the mitochondrially encoded Atp6p, Atp8p and Atp9p subunits of F(0) and to identify different assembly intermediates into which they are assimilated. Surprisingly, these core subunits of F(0) segregated into two different assembly intermediates one of which is composed of Atp6p, Atp8p, at least two stator subunits, and the Atp10p chaperone while the second consists of the F(1) ATPase and Atp9p ring. These studies show that assembly of the ATP synthase is not a single linear process, as previously thought, but rather involves two separate but coordinately regulated pathways that converge at the end stage.  相似文献   

13.
Cell-free (CF) expression technologies have emerged as promising methods for the production of individual membrane proteins of different types and origin. However, many membrane proteins need to be integrated in complex assemblies by interaction with soluble and membrane-integrated subunits in order to adopt stable and functionally folded structures. The production of complete molecular machines by CF expression as advancement of the production of only individual subunits would open a variety of new possibilities to study their assembly mechanisms, function, or composition. We demonstrate the successful CF formation of large molecular complexes consisting of both membrane-integrated and soluble subunits by expression of the atp operon from Caldalkalibacillus thermarum strain TA2.A1 using Escherichia coli extracts. The operon comprises nine open reading frames, and the 542-kDa F1Fo-ATP synthase complex is composed of 9 soluble and 16 membrane-embedded proteins in the stoichiometry α3β3γδ?ab2c13. Complete assembly into the functional complex was accomplished in all three typically used CF expression modes by (i) solubilizing initial precipitates, (ii) cotranslational insertion into detergent micelles or (iii) cotranslational insertion into preformed liposomes. The presence of all eight subunits, as well as specific enzyme activity and inhibition of the complex, was confirmed by biochemical analyses, freeze-fracture electron microscopy, and immunogold labeling. Further, single-particle analysis demonstrates that the structure and subunit organization of the CF and the reference in vivo expressed ATP synthase complexes are identical. This work establishes the production of highly complex molecular machines in defined environments either as proteomicelles or as proteoliposomes as a new application of CF expression systems.  相似文献   

14.
Cytochrome c-oxidase (COX), the terminal enzyme of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, plays a key role in the regulation of aerobic production of energy. Biogenesis of eukaryotic COX involves the coordinated action of two genomes. Three mitochondrial DNA-encoded subunits form the catalytic core of the enzyme, which contains metal prosthetic groups. Another 10 subunits encoded in the nuclear DNA act as a protective shield surrounding the core. COX biogenesis requires the assistance of >20 additional nuclear-encoded factors acting at all levels of the process. Expression of the mitochondrial-encoded subunits, expression and import of the nuclear-encoded subunits, insertion of the structural subunits into the mitochondrial inner membrane, addition of prosthetic groups, assembly of the holoenzyme, further maturation to form a dimer, and additional assembly into supercomplexes are all tightly regulated processes in a nuclear-mitochondrial-coordinated fashion. Such regulation ensures the building of a highly efficient machine able to catalyze the safe transfer of electrons from cytochrome c to molecular oxygen and ultimately facilitate the aerobic production of ATP. In this review, we will focus on describing and analyzing the present knowledge about the different regulatory checkpoints in COX assembly and the dynamic relationships between the different factors involved in the process. We have used information mostly obtained from the suitable yeast model, but also from bacterial and animal systems, by means of large-scale genetic, molecular biology, and physiological approaches and by integrating information concerning individual elements into a cellular system network.  相似文献   

15.
16.
The F-ATPase in bovine mitochondria is a membrane-bound complex of about 30 subunits of 18 different kinds. Currently, ∼85% of its structure is known. The enzyme has a membrane extrinsic catalytic domain, and a membrane intrinsic domain where the turning of the enzyme''s rotor is generated from the transmembrane proton-motive force. The domains are linked by central and peripheral stalks. The central stalk and a hydrophobic ring of c-subunits in the membrane domain constitute the enzyme''s rotor. The external surface of the catalytic domain and membrane subunit a are linked by the peripheral stalk, holding them static relative to the rotor. The membrane domain contains six additional subunits named ATP8, e, f, g, DAPIT (diabetes-associated protein in insulin-sensitive tissues), and 6.8PL (6.8-kDa proteolipid), each with a single predicted transmembrane α-helix, but their orientation and topography are unknown. Mutations in ATP8 uncouple the enzyme and interfere with its assembly, but its roles and the roles of the other five subunits are largely unknown. We have reacted accessible amino groups in the enzyme with bifunctional cross-linking agents and identified the linked residues. Cross-links involving the supernumerary subunits, where the structures are not known, show that the C terminus of ATP8 extends ∼70 Å from the membrane into the peripheral stalk and that the N termini of the other supernumerary subunits are on the same side of the membrane, probably in the mitochondrial matrix. These experiments contribute significantly toward building up a complete structural picture of the F-ATPase.  相似文献   

17.
NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase or complex I is a large multisubunit assembly of the mitochondrial inner membrane that channels high-energy electrons from metabolic NADH into the electron transport chain (ETC). Its dysfunction is associated with a range of progressive neurological disorders, often characterized by a very early onset and short devastating course. To better understand the cytopathological mechanisms of these disorders, we use live cell luminometry and imaging microscopy of patient skin fibroblasts with mutations in nuclear-encoded subunits of the complex. Here, we present an overview of our recent work, showing that mitochondrial membrane potential, Ca(2+) handling and ATP production are to a variable extent impaired among a large cohort of patient fibroblast lines. From the results obtained, the picture emerges that a reduction in cellular complex I activity leads to a depolarization of the mitochondrial membrane potential, resulting in a decreased supply of mitochondrial ATP to the Ca(2+)-ATPases of the intracellular stores and thus to a reduced Ca(2+) content of these stores. As a consequence, the increase in cytosolic Ca(2+) concentration evoked by a Ca(2+) mobilizing stimulus is decreased, leading to a reduction in mitochondrial Ca(2+) accumulation and ensuing ATP production and thus to a hampered energization of stimulus-induced cytosolic processes.  相似文献   

18.
F(1) subcomplex in mitochondrial samples is often considered to be a breakage product of the F(1)F(O) ATP synthase during sample handling and electrophoresis. We have used a progressive (15)N incorporation strategy to investigate the plant F(1)F(O) ATP synthase assembly model and the apparently free F(1) in plant mitochondria which is found in both the inner membrane and matrix. We show that subunits within F(1) in the inner membrane and matrix had a relatively higher (15)N incorporation rate than corresponding subunits in intact membrane F(1)F(O). This demonstrates that free F(1) was a newer pool with a faster turnover rate consistent with it being an assembly intermediate in vivo. Import of [(35)S]Met-labeled F(1) subunit precursors into Arabidopsis mitochondria showed the rapid accumulation of F(1) assembly intermediates. The different (15)N incorporation rate in matrix F(1), inner membrane F(1) and intact F(1)F(O) demonstrates these three represent different protein populations and are likely step by step intermediates during the assembly process of plant mitochondrial ATP synthase. The potential biological implications of in vivo accumulation of enzymatically active F(1) in mitochondria are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
《FEBS letters》2014,588(9):1832-1838
Mammalian complex I is composed of fourteen highly conserved core subunits and additional thirty subunits acquired in the course of evolution. At present, the function of the majority of these supernumerary subunits is poorly understood. In this work, we have studied NDUFA3, NDUFA5 and NDUFA12 supernumerary subunits to gain insight into their role in CI activity and biogenesis. Using human cell lines in which the expression of these subunits was knocked down with miRNAs, we showed that they are necessary for the formation of a functional holoenzyme. Analysis of the assembly intermediates in mitochondria depleted for these subunits further suggested that they are required for assembly and/or stability of the electron transferring Q module in the peripheral arm of the CI.  相似文献   

20.
Proteins specifically involved in the biogenesis of respiratory complex I in eukaryotes have been characterized. The complex I intermediate associated proteins CIA30 and CIA84 are tightly bound to an assembly intermediate of the membrane arm. Like chaperones, they are involved in multiple rounds of membrane arm assembly without being part of the mature structure. Two biosynthetic subunits of eukaryotic complex I have been characterized. The acyl carrier subunit is needed for proper assembly of the peripheral arm as well as the membrane arm of complex I. It may interact with enzymes of a mitochondrial fatty acid synthetase. The 39/40-kDa subunit appears to be an isomerase with a tightly bound NADPH. It is related to a protein family of reductases/isomerases. Both subunits have been discussed to be involved in the synthesis of a postulated, novel, high-potential redox group.  相似文献   

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