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1.
Sco1 is a metallochaperone that is required for copper delivery to the Cu(A) site in the CoxII subunit of cytochrome c oxidase. The only known missense mutation in human Sco1, a P174L substitution in the copper-binding domain, is associated with a fatal neonatal hepatopathy; however, the molecular basis for dysfunction of the protein is unknown. Immortalized fibroblasts from a SCO1 patient show a severe deficiency in cytochrome c oxidase activity that was partially rescued by overexpression of P174L Sco1. The mutant protein retained the ability to bind Cu(I) and Cu(II) normally when expressed in bacteria, but Cox17-mediated copper transfer was severely compromised both in vitro and in a yeast cytoplasmic assay. The corresponding P153L substitution in yeast Sco1 was impaired in suppressing the phenotype of cells harboring the weakly functional C57Y allele of Cox17; however, it was functional in sco1delta yeast when the wild-type COX17 gene was present. Pulse-chase labeling of mitochondrial translation products in SCO1 patient fibroblasts showed no change in the rate of CoxII translation, but there was a specific and rapid turnover of CoxII protein in the chase. These data indicate that the P174L mutation attenuates a transient interaction with Cox17 that is necessary for copper transfer. They further suggest that defective Cox17-mediated copper metallation of Sco1, as well as the subsequent failure of Cu(A) site maturation, is the basis for the inefficient assembly of the cytochrome c oxidase complex in SCO1 patients.  相似文献   

2.
Deficiencies in cytochrome oxidase, the terminal enzyme of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, are most often caused by an inability to complete assembly of the enzyme. Pathogenic mutations in SCO2, which encodes a cytochrome oxidase assembly factor, were recently described in several cases of fatal infantile cardioencephalomyopathy. To determine the molecular etiology of these disorders, we describe the generation and characterization of the parallel mutations in the homologous yeast SCO1 gene. We show that the E155K yeast sco1 mutant is respiration-competent, whereas the S240F mutant is not. Interestingly, the S240F mutation allows partial but incorrect assembly of cytochrome oxidase, as judged by an altered cytochrome aa(3) peak. Immunoblot analysis reveals a specific absence of subunit 2 from the cytochrome oxidase in this mutant. Taken together, our data suggest that Sco1p provides copper to the Cu(A) site on subunit 2 at a step occurring late in the assembly pathway. This is the first instance of a yeast cytochrome oxidase assembly mutant that is partially assembled. The S240F mutant also represents a powerful new tool with which to elucidate further steps in the cytochrome oxidase assembly pathway.  相似文献   

3.
The present studies were undertaken to further characterize the properties of Sco1p, a constituent of the mitochondrial inner membrane implicated in copper transfer to cytochrome oxidase. We report a procedure capable of yielding Sco1p of >95% purity. Sco1p has been purified from strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae that overexpress the protein. The amino-terminal sequence of purified Sco1p indicates that the first 40 amino acids of the primary translation product constitute a mitochondrial targeting sequence that is proteolytically cleaved during import. We estimate that Sco1p constitutes 0.08% total mitochondrial proteins in wild type yeast and 5% in the transformant used for the purification. Sco1p contains approximately 1 mol of copper/mol protein. The copper is not removed by the treatment of Sco1p with EDTA, indicating that it is bound with high affinity. Purified Sco1p sediments identical to Sco1p in crude extracts of mitochondria from wild type yeast or from a strain transformed with SCO1 on a high copy plasmid. Native Sco1p has an estimated mass of 88 kDa, suggesting that it is a homotrimer. Sco1p expressed as a soluble protein lacking the internal 17 amino acids of the membrane-anchoring domain has been localized in the matrix. The protein has also been targeted to the intermembrane space. Neither soluble matrix nor intermembrane-localized Sco1p is able to complement a sco1 mutant, suggesting that only the membrane form with the carboxyl-terminal domain facing the intermembrane space is able to exert its normal function.  相似文献   

4.
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae gene SCO1 has been shown to play an essential role in copper delivery to cytochrome c oxidase. Biochemical studies demonstrated specific transfer of copper from Cox17p to Sco1p, and physical interactions between the Sco1p and Cox2p. Deletion of SCO1 yeast gene results in a respiratory deficient phenotype. This study aims to gain a more detailed insight on the effects of SCO1 deletion on S. cerevisiae metabolism. We compared, using a proteomic approach, the protein pattern of SCO1 null mutant strain and wild-type BY4741 strain grown on fermentable and on nonfermentable carbon sources. The analysis showed that on nonfermentable medium, the SCO1 mutant displayed a protein profile similar to that of actively fermenting yeast cells. Indeed, on 3% glycerol, this mutant displayed an increase of some glycolytic and fermentative enzymes such as glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase 1, enolase 2, pyruvate decarboxylase 1, and alcohol dehydrogenase 1. These data were supported by immunoblotting and enzyme activity assay. Moreover, the ethanol assay and the oxygen consumption measurement demonstrated a fermentative activity in SCO1 mutant on respiratory medium. Our results suggest that on nonfermentable carbon source, the lack of Sco1p causes a metabolic shift from respiration to fermentation.  相似文献   

5.
6.
The assembly of the copper sites in cytochrome c oxidase involves a series of accessory proteins, including Cox11, Cox17, and Sco1. The two mitochondrial inner membrane proteins Cox11 and Sco1 are thought to be copper donors to the Cu(B) and Cu(A) sites of cytochrome oxidase, respectively, whereas Cox17 is believed to be the copper donor to Sco1 within the intermembrane space. In this report we show Cox17 is a specific copper donor to both Sco1 and Cox11. Using in vitro studies with purified proteins, we demonstrate direct copper transfer from CuCox17 to Sco1 or Cox11. The transfer is specific because no transfer occurs to heterologous proteins, including bovine serum albumin and carbonic anhydrase. In addition, a C57Y mutant of Cox17 fails to transfer copper to Sco1 but is competent for copper transfer to Cox11. The in vitro transfer studies were corroborated by a yeast cytoplasm expression system. Soluble domains of Sco1 and Cox11, lacking the mitochondrial targeting sequence and transmembrane domains, were expressed in the yeast cytoplasm. Metallation of these domains was strictly dependent on the co-expression of Cox17. Thus, Cox17 represents a novel copper chaperone that delivers copper to two proteins.  相似文献   

7.
Cox17 is an essential protein in the assembly of cytochrome c oxidase within the mitochondrion. Cox17 is implicated in providing copper ions for formation of CuA and CuB sites in the oxidase complex. To address whether Cox17 is functional in shuttling copper ions to the mitochondrion, Cox17 was tethered to the mitochondrial inner membrane by a fusion to the transmembrane domain of the inner membrane protein, Sco2. The copper-binding domain of Sco2 that projects into the inter-mitochondrial membrane space was replaced with Cox17. The Sco2/Cox17 fusion protein containing the mitochondrial import sequence and transmembrane segment of Sco2 is exclusively localized within the mitochondrion. The Sco2/Cox17 protein restores respiratory growth and normal cytochrome oxidase activity in cox17Delta cells. These studies suggest that the function of Cox17 is confined to the mitochondrial intermembrane space. Domain mapping of yeast Cox17 reveals that the carboxyl-terminal segment of the protein has a function within the intermembrane space that is independent of copper ion binding. The essential C-terminal function of Cox17 maps to a candidate amphipathic helix that is important for mitochondrial uptake and retention of the Cox17 protein. This motif can be spatially separated from the N-terminal copper-binding functional motif. Possible roles of the C-terminal motif are discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Sco1 is a conserved essential protein, which has been implicated in the delivery of copper to cytochrome c oxidase, the last enzyme of the electron transport chain. In this study, we show for the first time that the purified C-terminal domain of yeast Sco1 binds one Cu(I)/monomer. X-ray absorption spectroscopy suggests that the Cu(I) is ligated via three ligands, and we show that two cysteines, present in a conserved motif CXXXC, and a conserved histidine are involved in Cu(I) ligation. The mutation of any one of the conserved residues in Sco1 expressed in yeast abrogates the function of Sco1 resulting in a non-functional cytochrome c oxidase complex. Thus, the function of Sco1 correlates with Cu(I) binding. Data obtained from size-exclusion chromatography experiments with mitochondrial lysates suggest that full-length Sco1 may be oligomeric in vivo.  相似文献   

9.
Cytochrome c oxidase (COX) is a multi-subunit enzyme of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. Delivery of metal cofactors to COX is essential for assembly, which represents a long-standing puzzle. The proteins Cox17, Sco1/2, and Cox11 are necessary for copper insertion into CuA and CuB redox centers of COX in eukaryotes. A genome-wide search in all prokaryotic genomes combined with genomic context reveals that only Sco and Cox11 have orthologs in prokaryotes. However, while Cox11 function is confined to COX assembly, Sco acts as a multifunctional linker connecting a variety of biological processes. Multifunctionality is achieved by gene duplication and paralogs. Neighbor genes of Sco paralogs often encode cuproenzymes and cytochrome c domains and, in some cases, Sco is fused to cytochrome c. This led us to suggest that cytochrome c might be relevant to Sco function and the two proteins might jointly be involved in COX assembly. Sco is also related, in terms of gene neighborhood and phylogenetic occurrence, to a newly detected protein involved in copper trafficking in bacteria and archaea, but with no sequence similarity to the mitochondrial copper chaperone Cox17. By linking the assembly system to the copper uptake system, Sco allows COX to face alternative copper trafficking pathways.  相似文献   

10.
Two Arabidopsis thaliana genes (HCC1 and HCC2), resulting from a duplication that took place before the emergence of flowering plants, encode proteins with homology to the SCO proteins involved in copper insertion during cytochrome c oxidase (COX) assembly in other organisms. Heterozygote HCC1 mutant plants produce 25% abnormal seeds with defective embryos arrested at the heart or torpedo stage. These embryos lack COX activity, suggesting that the requirement of HCC1 during the early stages of plant development is related with its COX assembly function. Homozygote HCC2 mutant plants develop normally and do not show changes in COX2 levels. These plants display increased sensitivity of root growth to increased copper and a higher expression of miR398 and other genes that respond to copper limitation, in spite of the fact that they have a higher copper content than the wild type. HCC2 mutant plants also show increased expression of stress-responsive genes. The results suggest that HCC1 is the protein involved in COX biogenesis and that HCC2, that lacks the cysteines and histidine putatively involved in copper binding, functions in copper sensing and redox homeostasis. In addition, plants that overexpress HCC1 have an altered response of root elongation to changes in copper in the growth medium and increased expression of two low-copper-responsive genes, suggesting that HCC1 may also have a role in copper homeostasis.  相似文献   

11.
A search of the Bacillus subtilis genome identifies a potential homolog, ypmQ, of the inner mitochondrial membrane protein Sco1 from yeast. Sco1 has been found to aid the delivery of copper to cytochrome c oxidase. B. subtilis expresses two members of the cytochrome oxidase family, a cytochrome c oxidase that has two copper centers, Cu(A) and Cu(B), and a menaquinol oxidase that has only Cu(B). Deletion of ypmQ in B. subtilis depresses expression of cytochrome c oxidase but not menaquinol oxidase. Levels of cytochrome c oxidase recover when copper is added to the growth medium of the DeltaypmQ strain or when ypmQ is expressed from a plasmid. Neither treatment affects the amount or activity of menaquinol oxidase. YpmQ in which two conserved cysteines are replaced by serines and a conserved histidine is replaced by alanine do not complement the deletion of ypmQ even though these mutant forms are found in the membrane extract at a level similar to the wild type protein. We propose that the two cysteines and the histidine are critical for the function of YpmQ and suggest they are involved in copper exchange between YpmQ and the Cu(A) site of cytochrome c oxidase.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The studies described here were performed to characterize further the plasma membrane associated protein BsSco, which is the product of the gene ypmQ, in Bacillus subtilis. BsSco is a member of the Sco family of proteins found in the inner mitochondrial membrane of yeast and humans and implicated as an accessory protein in the assembly of the Cu(A) site of cytochrome c oxidase. We have cloned the gene expressing BsSco, placed a six-histidine tag on its C-terminus, and over-expressed this protein in B. subtilis. Recombinant BsSco with the his-tag has been purified from Triton X-100-solubilized plasma membranes by nickel metal affinity chromatography. Mass spectral analysis of the purified protein is consistent with processing of BsSco by signal peptidase II removing an N-terminal putative transmembrane sequence to leave an acyl-glyceryl moiety at cysteine residue 19. Antibodies, raised against purified, recombinant BsSco, were used to characterize the timing of the level of native BsSco in batch cultures of wild-type B. subtilis. There is a marked lag in the level of native BsSco, but it does appear prior to cytochrome c oxidase, which is expressed in late stage growth. This work supports a role for BsSco in the assembly of the Cu(A) site of cytochrome c oxidase and its functional relationship to the Sco proteins found in eukaryotic cells.  相似文献   

14.
The nuclear gene OXA1 is essential for respiratory growth in yeast. It codes for a chaperon-like protein, and has pleiotropic effects on the assembly of cytochrome c oxidase and ATP synthase of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. To study respiratory complex formation in plants, we have cloned a homolog of the yeast oxa1 in Arabidopsis thaliana , OXA1At , by functional complementation of a yeast oxa1 mutant. OXA1At is a single copy gene and appears to be constitutively expressed in A. thaliana . Although OXA1At encodes a protein sharing only 30% amino acid identity with the yeast Oxa1 protein, hydrophobic domains likely corresponding to trans -membrane domains are strictly conserved. Cytochrome spectra and measurements of respiratory activities show that replacement of the yeast Oxa1 protein with the A. thaliana homolog leads to correct assembly and activity of cytochrome c oxidase, but to partial restoration of ATPase activity. Our results suggest that the Oxa1At protein is essential for the respiratory complex assembly in A. thaliana , and that genes involved in mitochondrial multiprotein complex formation can be conserved between plants and other organisms.  相似文献   

15.
The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a facultative anaerobe and its mitochondrial morphology is linked to its metabolic activity. The Sco proteins (Sco1p and Sco2p) were characterized as proteins required for copper delivery to cytochrome c oxidase. Our results indicated a higher fermentative capacity of the sco1-Δ mutant in comparison to the control and the sco2-Δ mutant strains. The mitochondrial proteome analysis showed that the sco1-Δ mutant down-regulated components of the respiratory chain, the TCA cycle and transport of metabolites across the mitochondrial membrane. This evidence suggests that the absence of Sco1p causes irreversible damage to the mitochondria.  相似文献   

16.
Human SCO1 and SCO2 are copper-binding proteins involved in the assembly of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase (COX). We have determined the crystal structure of the conserved, intermembrane space core portion of apo-hSCO1 to 2.8 A. It is similar to redox active proteins, including thioredoxins (Trx) and peroxiredoxins (Prx), with putative copper-binding ligands located at the same positions as the conserved catalytic residues in Trx and Prx. SCO1 does not have disulfide isomerization or peroxidase activity, but both hSCO1 and a sco1 null in yeast show extreme sensitivity to hydrogen peroxide. Of the six missense mutations in SCO1 and SCO2 associated with fatal mitochondrial disorders, one lies in a highly conserved exposed surface away from the copper-binding region, suggesting that this region is involved in protein-protein interactions. These data suggests that SCO functions not as a COX copper chaperone, but rather as a mitochondrial redox signaling molecule.  相似文献   

17.
The Sco family of proteins are involved in the assembly of the dinuclear CuA site in cytochrome c oxidase (COX), the terminal enzyme in aerobic respiration. These proteins, which are found in both eukaryotes and prokaryotes, are characterized by a conserved CXXXC sequence motif that binds copper ions and that has also been proposed to perform a thiol:disulfide oxidoreductase function. The crystal structures of Saccharomyces cerevisiae apo Sco1 (apo-ySco1) and Sco1 in the presence of copper ions (Cu–ySco1) were determined to 1.8- and 2.3-Å resolutions, respectively. Yeast Sco1 exhibits a thioredoxin-like fold, similar to that observed for human Sco1 and a homolog from Bacillus subtilis. The Cu–ySco1 structure, obtained by soaking apo-ySco1 crystals in copper ions, reveals an unexpected copper-binding site involving Cys181 and Cys216, cysteine residues present in ySco1 but not in other homologs. The conserved CXXXC cysteines, Cys148 and Cys152, can undergo redox chemistry in the crystal. An essential histidine residue, His239, is located on a highly flexible loop, denoted the Sco loop, and can adopt positions proximal to both pairs of cysteines. Interactions between ySco1 and its partner proteins yeast Cox17 and yeast COX2 are likely to occur via complementary electrostatic surfaces. This high-resolution model of a eukaryotic Sco protein provides new insight into Sco copper binding and function.  相似文献   

18.
The scoop on Sco     
In the January 3 issue of Cell Metabolism, report that the mitochondrial metallochaperones Sco1 and Sco2, essential for cytochrome c oxidase assembly, are also responsible for maintenance of cell copper homeostasis, thus showing a new function of mitochondria.  相似文献   

19.
Human SCO1 and SCO2 are metallochaperones that are essential for the assembly of the catalytic core of cytochrome c oxidase (COX). Here we show that they have additional, unexpected roles in cellular copper homeostasis. Mutations in either SCO result in a cellular copper deficiency that is both tissue and allele specific. This phenotype can be dissociated from the defects in COX assembly and is suppressed by overexpression of SCO2, but not SCO1. Overexpression of a SCO1 mutant in control cells in which wild-type SCO1 levels were reduced by shRNA recapitulates the copper-deficiency phenotype in SCO1 patient cells. The copper-deficiency phenotype reflects not a change in high-affinity copper uptake but rather a proportional increase in copper efflux. These results suggest a mitochondrial pathway for the regulation of cellular copper content that involves signaling through SCO1 and SCO2, perhaps by their thiol redox or metal-binding state.  相似文献   

20.
Components of some protein complexes present in the inner membrane of mitochondria are encoded in both nuclear and mitochondrial genomes, and correct sorting and assembly of these proteins is necessary for proper respiratory function. Recent studies in yeast suggest that Oxa1p, a protein conserved between prokaryotes and eukaryotes, is an essential factor for protein sorting and assembly into membranes. We previously identified AtOXA1, an Arabidopsis homologue of OXA1 by functional complementation of a yeast oxa1- mutant. In this study, we investigated the genomic organization of AtOXA1 and localization of the AtOXA1 protein. Characterization of the AtOXA1 genomic region indicated that the gene consists of 10 exons and is located on chromosome V. A database search also revealed another gene coding for a putative protein homologous to AtOXA1 on chromosome II. Transient expression of a green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion in suspension-cultured tobacco cells showed that AtOXA1 is targeted into mitochondria by its N-terminal presequence. Antibodies raised against AtOXA1 recognized a 38-kDa intrinsic protein of the inner mitochondrial membrane. Thus, localization of AtOXA1 in the mitochondrial inner membrane, together with our previous complementation experiment in yeast, suggested that it is a functional homologue of Oxa1p.  相似文献   

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