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1.
The assembly of cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) in yeast mitochondria is shown to be dependent on a new assembly factor designated Coa1 that associates with the mitochondrial inner membrane. Translation of the mitochondrial-encoded subunits of CcO occurs normally in coa1Delta cells, but these subunits fail to accumulate. The respiratory defect in coa1Delta cells is suppressed by high-copy MSS51, MDJ1 and COX10. Mss51 functions in Cox1 translation and elongation, whereas Cox10 participates in the biosynthesis of heme a, a key cofactor of CcO. Respiration in coa1Delta and shy1Delta cells is enhanced when Mss51 and Cox10 are coexpressed. Shy1 has been implicated in formation of the heme a3-Cu(B) site in Cox1. The interaction between Coa1 and Cox1, and the physical and genetic interactions between Coa1 and Mss51, Shy1 and Cox14 suggest that Coa1 coordinates the transition of newly synthesized Cox1 from the Mss51:Cox14 complex to the heme a cofactor insertion involving Shy1. coa1Delta cells also display a mitochondrial copper defect suggesting that Coa1 may have a direct link to copper metallation of CcO.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Stalled biogenesis of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) complex results in degradation of subunits containing redox cofactors. The conserved Oma1 metalloproteinase mediates facile Cox1 degradation in cells lacking the Coa2 assembly factor, but not in a series of other mutants stalled in CcO maturation. Oma1 is activated in coa2Δ cells, but the selective Cox1 degradation does not arise merely from its activation. Oma1 is also active in cells with dysfunctional mitochondria and cox11Δ cells impaired in CcO maturation, but this activation does not result in Oma1-mediated Cox1 degradation. The facile and selective degradation of Cox1 in coa2Δ cells, relative to other CcO assembly mutants, is likely due to impaired hemylation and subsequent misfolding of the subunit. Specific Cox1 proteolysis in coa2Δ cells arises from a combination of Oma1 activation and a susceptible conformation of Cox1.  相似文献   

4.
Three missense SURF1 mutations identified in patients with Leigh syndrome (LS) were evaluated in the yeast homolog Shy1 protein. Introduction of two of the Leigh mutations, F249T and Y344D, in Shy1 failed to significantly attenuate the function of Shy1 in cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) biogenesis as seen with the human mutations. In contrast, a G137E substitution in Shy1 results in a nonfunctional protein conferring a CcO deficiency. The G137E Shy1 mutant phenocopied shy1Δ cells in impaired Cox1 hemylation and low mitochondrial copper. A genetic screen for allele-specific suppressors of the G137E Shy1 mutant revealed Coa2, Cox10, and a novel factor designated Coa4. Coa2 and Cox10 are previously characterized CcO assembly factors. Coa4 is a twin CX9C motif mitochondrial protein localized in the intermembrane space and associated with the inner membrane. Cells lacking Coa4 are depressed in CcO activity but show no impairment in Cox1 maturation or formation of the Shy1-stabilized Cox1 assembly intermediate. To glean insights into the functional role of Coa4 in CcO biogenesis, an unbiased suppressor screen of coa4Δ cells was conducted. Respiratory function of coa4Δ cells was restored by the overexpression of CYC1 encoding cytochrome c. Cyc1 is known to be important at an ill-defined step in the assembly and/or stability of CcO. This new link to Coa4 may begin to further elucidate the role of Cyc1 in CcO biogenesis.Leigh syndrome (LS) is a highly progressive neurological disorder of infancy characterized by necrotizing lesions in the midbrain and brain stem (32). Humans afflicted with LS have compromised oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) function due to mutations in nuclear or mitochondrial genes encoding respiratory chain components or their assembly factors. Although LS infants are born with a normal appearance, neurological lesions develop within months and dysfunction extends to other organs, resulting in a high mortality rate. LS patients typically have mutations affecting complex I or complex IV (cytochrome c oxidase [CcO]) of the OXPHOS pathway (14). Patients with a specific CcO deficiency most often have mutations in the SURF1 gene that encodes a CcO assembly factor (9, 15, 41).SURF1 is not absolutely required for CcO biogenesis in humans, since SURF1-deficient patient fibroblasts retain 10 to 15% of residual CcO activity (32). The yeast homolog of SURF1 is Shy1 (SURF1 homolog in yeast) and has a conserved function in CcO biogenesis (24). Yeast lacking Shy1 retain residual CcO activity, but growth of the mutant strain is compromised on respiratory, nonfermentable carbon sources (4).Insights into the function of SURF1 in human cells have been gleaned through the characterization of stalled CcO assembly intermediates in cells isolated from SURF1 LS patients using blue native (BN) gel electrophoresis. One intermediate, designated S2, which accumulates in SURF1-deficient patient fibroblasts, consists of Cox1 in association with two nuclear CcO subunits, CoxIV and Va (38, 45, 47). A similar stalled assembly intermediate accumulates in CcO-deficient patients with mutations in two other assembly factors, SCO1 and SCO2. These assembly proteins function in the maturation of the mitochondrially encoded Cox2 subunit and the binuclear copper (CuA) site within this subunit. In contrast, studies with patient fibroblasts harboring mutations in the genes encoding Cox10 and Cox15 proteins, which are involved in the biosynthesis of the heme a cofactor used exclusively by CcO (at the heme a and heme a3:CuB sites), show only free Cox1 by BN analysis (1, 2). These data suggest that CcO biogenesis commences with the mitochondrial synthesis and maturation of Cox1, while the other two mitochondrially encoded subunits, Cox2 and Cox3, are added at later stages. The absence of the S2 intermediate in cells with mutations in COX10 or COX15 is consistent with the prediction that the S2 assembly intermediate contains Cox1 with at least the heme a center formed.The first major clue to the function of SURF1 came from studies with the bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides, in which surf1 mutant cells showed impairment in the formation of the heme a3:CuB bimetallic center within Cox1 (33). Specifically, heme a and CuB were observed spectroscopically with surf1 mutant cells, but heme a3 was not present. The CuB site had an altered spectroscopic signature to compensate for the loss of heme a3, as the two cofactors typically coordinate with each other. This study suggests Surf1 is involved in the maturation of the heme a3 site in CcO. In lower eukaryotes, impairment of CcO assembly results in proteolytic degradation of the stalled intermediates (16). Thus, it is not possible to isolate the CcO complex in shy1Δ yeast cells to identify any missing cofactors. However, Shy1 was shown to have a key role in formation of the heterobimetallic CuB:heme a3 center in yeast Cox1 (18). Furthermore, it was recently shown that Surf1 in bacteria is a heme-binding protein (10), although these findings have yet to be confirmed in eukaryotes.Additional insights into the function of SURF1/Shy1 came from the isolation of genetic suppressors of shy1Δ respiratory deficiency in yeast (3). Respiratory function can be partially restored in shy1Δ cells by enhancing Cox1 translation through the overexpression of MSS51 (6), a dual-function protein that acts as a COX1 translational activator in addition to binding to the newly synthesized Cox1 polypeptide. Suppression of the shy1Δ respiratory defect is also observed with enhanced expression levels of the two CcO subunits Cox5a and Cox6 corresponding to the human S2-containing subunits CoxIV and Va (15). Overexpression of COA2, a recently identified CcO assembly factor shown to interact with Shy1, can also suppress the shy1Δ respiratory defect (30). Finally, overexpression of the COX10 gene that encodes the hydroxyfarnesyl transferase, which generates heme o as the first step in heme a biosynthesis, can partially restore respiratory function in shy1Δ cells. Although overexpression of COX10 has only very weak suppressor activity, a marked synergistic effect was apparent in the overexpression of both MSS51 and COX10 (29).Shy1 has a secondary function in yeast in the maintenance of the conserved mitochondrial copper storage pool that is used in the copper metallation of Cox1 and Cox2 during CcO biogenesis. Yeast cells lacking Shy1 contain mitochondria with a partially depleted matrix copper storage pool, and the respiratory defect of shy1Δ cells can be partially reversed by growth in the presence of exogenous copper (29). Similarly, liver and muscle samples from patients with SURF1 mutations exhibit a cellular copper deficiency (37). Maintenance of the matrix copper pool is postulated to be linked to active CcO biogenesis in general, as patient tissue with mutations to two other CcO assembly factors, SCO1 and SCO2, result in a cellular copper deficiency as well (22).Human SURF1 and yeast Shy1 are both mitochondrial proteins tethered to the inner membrane (IM) by two transmembrane (TM) helices with a large central domain projecting into the intermembrane space (IMS). Most LS patients with SURF1 mutations have gene deletions or rearrangements. Missense mutations in SURF1 are quite rare, with only a limited number being reported. These mutations tend to be associated with a mild clinical phenotype, and patient survival is prolonged (28). We selected a subset of known missense mutations, two of which lie within the IMS globular domain and a third that maps to the second TM domain. In an attempt to gain further insights into which functional step of SURF1 was compromised by the missense mutations, we engineered and characterized the corresponding mutations in conserved residues of yeast SHY1. In doing so, we have additionally identified a new member of the CcO assembly factor family, Coa4, that may be linked to the role of cytochrome c in CcO assembly. We show that the respiratory defect of cells lacking Coa4 is specifically suppressed by the overexpression of the IMS electron carrier cytochrome c (CYC1). This is the first time CYC1 has been found as a suppressor of a CcO assembly mutant.  相似文献   

5.
The synthesis of the heme a cofactor used in cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) is dependent on the sequential action of heme o synthase (Cox10) and heme a synthase (Cox15). The active state of Cox10 appears to be a homo-oligomeric complex, and formation of this complex is dependent on the newly synthesized CcO subunit Cox1 and the presence of an early Cox1 assembly intermediate. Cox10 multimerization is triggered by progression of Cox1 from the early assembly intermediate to downstream intermediates. The CcO assembly factor Coa2 appears important in coupling the presence of newly synthesized Cox1 to Cox10 oligomerization. Cells lacking Coa2 are impaired in Cox10 complex formation as well as the formation of a high mass Cox15 complex. Increasing Cox1 synthesis in coa2Δ cells restores respiratory function if Cox10 protein levels are elevated. The C-terminal segment of Cox1 is important in triggering Cox10 oligomerization. Expression of the C-terminal 54 residues of Cox1 appended to a heterologous matrix protein leads to efficient Cox10 complex formation in coa2Δ cells, but it fails to induce Cox15 complex formation. The state of Cox10 was evaluated in mutants, which predispose human patients to CcO deficiency and the neurological disorder Leigh syndrome. The presence of the D336V mutation in the yeast Cox10 backbone results in a catalytically inactive enzyme that is fully competent to oligomerize. Thus, Cox10 oligomerization and catalytic activation are separate processes and can be uncoupled.  相似文献   

6.
7.
The hydrogen peroxide sensitivity of cells lacking two proteins, Sco1 and Cox11, important in the assembly of cytochrome c oxidase (CcO), is shown to arise from the transient accumulation of a pro-oxidant heme A-Cox1 stalled intermediate. The peroxide sensitivity of these cells is abrogated by a reduction in either Cox1 expression or heme A formation but exacerbated by either enhanced Cox1 expression or heme A production arising from overexpression of COX15. Sco1 and Cox11 are implicated in the formation of the Cu(A) and Cu(B) sites of CcO, respectively. The respective wild-type genes suppress the peroxide sensitivities of sco1Delta and cox11Delta cells, but no cross-complementation is seen with noncognate genes. Copper-binding mutant alleles of Sco1 and Cox11 that are nonfunctional in promoting the assembly of CcO are functional in suppressing the peroxide sensitivity of their respective null mutants. Likewise, human Sco1 that is nonfunctional in yeast CcO assembly is able to suppress the peroxide sensitivity of yeast sco1Delta cells. Thus, a disconnect exists between the respiratory capacity of cells and hydrogen peroxide sensitivity. Hydrogen peroxide sensitivity of sco1Delta and cox11Delta cells is abrogated by overexpression of a novel mitochondrial ATPase Afg1 that promotes the degradation of CcO mitochondrially encoded subunits. Studies on the hydrogen peroxide sensitivity in CcO assembly mutants reveal new aspects of the CcO assembly process.  相似文献   

8.
Cytochrome c oxidase (complex IV) of the respiratory chain is assembled from nuclear and mitochondrially-encoded subunits. Defects in the assembly process lead to severe human disorders such as Leigh syndrome. Shy1 is an assembly factor for complex IV in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and mutations of its human homolog, SURF1, are the most frequent cause for Leigh syndrome. We report that Shy1 promotes complex IV biogenesis through association with different protein modules; Shy1 interacts with Mss51 and Cox14, translational regulators of Cox1. Additionally, Shy1 associates with the subcomplexes of complex IV that are potential assembly intermediates. Formation of these subcomplexes depends on Coa1 (YIL157c), a novel assembly factor that cooperates with Shy1. Moreover, partially assembled forms of complex IV bound to Shy1 and Cox14 can associate with the bc1 complex to form transitional supercomplexes. We suggest that Shy1 links Cox1 translational regulation to complex IV assembly and supercomplex formation.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Mutations in SURF1, the human homologue of yeast SHY1, are responsible for Leigh's syndrome, a neuropathy associated with cytochrome oxidase (COX) deficiency. Previous studies of the yeast model of this disease showed that mutant forms of Mss51p, a translational activator of COX1 mRNA, partially rescue the COX deficiency of shy1 mutants by restoring normal synthesis of the mitochondrially encoded Cox1p subunit of COX. Here we present evidence showing that Cox1p synthesis is reduced in most COX mutants but is restored to that of wild type by the same mss51 mutation that suppresses shy1 mutants. An important exception is a null mutation in COX14, which by itself or in combination with other COX mutations does not affect Cox1p synthesis. Cox14p and Mss51p are shown to interact with newly synthesized Cox1p and with each other. We propose that the interaction of Mss51p and Cox14p with Cox1p to form a transient Cox14p-Cox1p-Mss51p complex functions to downregulate Cox1p synthesis. The release of Mss51p from the complex occurs at a downstream step in the assembly pathway, probably catalyzed by Shy1p.  相似文献   

11.
Synthesis of the largest cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) subunit, Cox1, on yeast mitochondrial ribosomes is coupled to assembly of CcO. The translational activator Mss51 is sequestered in early assembly intermediate complexes by an interaction with Cox14 that depends on the presence of newly synthesized Cox1. If CcO assembly is prevented, the level of Mss51 available for translational activation is reduced. We deleted the C-terminal 11 or 15 residues of Cox1 by site-directed mutagenesis of mtDNA. Although these deletions did not prevent respiratory growth of yeast, they eliminated the assembly-feedback control of Cox1 synthesis. Furthermore, these deletions reduced the strength of the Mss51-Cox14 interaction as detected by co-immunoprecipitation, confirming the importance of the Cox1 C-terminal residues for Mss51 sequestration. We surveyed a panel of mutations that block CcO assembly for the strength of their effect on Cox1 synthesis, both by pulse labeling and expression of the ARG8m reporter fused to COX1. Deletion of the nuclear gene encoding Cox6, one of the first subunits to be added to assembling CcO, caused the most severe reduction in Cox1 synthesis. Deletion of the C-terminal 15 amino acids of Cox1 increased Cox1 synthesis in the presence of each of these mutations, except pet54. Our data suggest a novel activity of Pet54 required for normal synthesis of Cox1 that is independent of the Cox1 C-terminal end.  相似文献   

12.
Surf1p is a protein involved in the assembly of mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes. However its exact role in this process remains to be elucidated. We studied SHY1, the yeast homologue of SURF1, with an aim to obtain a better understanding of the molecular pathogenesis of cytochrome c oxidase (COX) deficiency in SURF1 mutant cells from Leigh syndrome patients. Assembly of COX was analysed in a shy1 null mutant strain by two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (2D-PAGE). Steady-state levels of the enzyme were found to be strongly reduced, the total amount of assembled complex being approximately 30% of control. The presence of a significant amount of holo-COX in the SHY1-disruptant strain suggests that Shy1p may either facilitate assembly of the enzyme, or increase its stability. However, our observations, based on 2D-PAGE analysis of mitochondria labelled in vitro, now provide the first direct evidence that COX assembly is impaired in a Deltashy1 strain. COX enzyme assembled in the absence of Shy1p appears to be structurally and enzymically normal. The in vitro labelling studies additionally indicate that mitochondrial translation is significantly increased in the shy1 null mutant strain, possibly reflecting a compensatory mechanism for reduced respiratory capacity. Protein interactions of both Shy1p and Surf1p are implied by their appearance in a high molecular weight complex of about 250 kDa, as shown by 2D-PAGE.  相似文献   

13.
Regulation of eukaryotic cytochrome oxidase assembly occurs at the level of Cox1 translation, its central mitochondria-encoded subunit. Translation of COX1 messenger RNA is coupled to complex assembly in a negative feedback loop: the translational activator Mss51 is thought to be sequestered to assembly intermediates, rendering it incompetent to promote translation. In this study, we identify Coa3 (cytochrome oxidase assembly factor 3; Yjl062w-A), a novel regulator of mitochondrial COX1 translation and cytochrome oxidase assembly. We show that Coa3 and Cox14 form assembly intermediates with newly synthesized Cox1 and are required for Mss51 association with these complexes. Mss51 exists in equilibrium between a latent, translational resting, and a committed, translation-effective, state that are represented as distinct complexes. Coa3 and Cox14 promote formation of the latent state and thus down-regulate COX1 expression. Consequently, lack of Coa3 or Cox14 function traps Mss51 in the committed state and promotes Cox1 synthesis. Our data indicate that Coa1 binding to sequestered Mss51 in complex with Cox14, Coa3, and Cox1 is essential for full inactivation.  相似文献   

14.
In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase (COX) biogenesis is translationally regulated. Mss51, a specific COX1 mRNA translational activator and Cox1 chaperone, drives the regulatory mechanism. During translation and post-translationally, newly synthesized Cox1 physically interacts with a complex of proteins involving Ssc1, Mss51, and Cox14, which eventually hand over Cox1 to the assembly pathway. This step is probably catalyzed by assembly chaperones such as Shy1 in a process coupled to the release of Ssc1-Mss51 from the complex. Impaired COX assembly results in the trapping of Mss51 in the complex, thus limiting its availability for COX1 mRNA translation. An exception is a null mutation in COX14 that does not affect Cox1 synthesis because the Mss51 trapping complexes become unstable, and Mss51 is readily available for translation. Here we present evidence showing that Cox25 is a new essential COX assembly factor that plays some roles similar to Cox14. A null mutation in COX25 by itself or in combination with other COX mutations does not affect Cox1 synthesis. Cox25 is an inner mitochondrial membrane intrinsic protein with a hydrophilic C terminus protruding into the matrix. Cox25 is an essential component of the complexes containing newly synthesized Cox1, Ssc1, Mss51, and Cox14. In addition, Cox25 is also found to interact with Shy1 and Cox5 in a complex that does not contain Mss51. These results suggest that once Ssc1-Mss51 are released from the Cox1 stabilization complex, Cox25 continues to interact with Cox14 and Cox1 to facilitate the formation of multisubunit COX assembly intermediates.  相似文献   

15.
Deletion of the yeast mitochondrial gene COX2 encoding subunit 2 (Cox2) of cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) results in loss of respiration (Δcox2 strain). Supekova et al. (2010) [1] transformed a Δcox2 strain with a vector expressing Cox2 with a mitochondrial targeting sequence (MTS) and the point mutation W56R (Cox2W56R), restoring respiratory growth. Here, the CcO carrying the allotopically-expressed Cox2W56R was characterized. Yeast mitochondria from the wild-type (WT) and the Δcox2 + Cox2W56R strains were subjected to Blue Native electrophoresis. In-gel activity of CcO and spectroscopic quantitation of cytochromes revealed that only 60% of CcO is present in the complemented strain, and that less CcO is found associated in supercomplexes as compared to WT. CcOs from the WT and the mutant exhibited similar subunit composition, although activity was 20–25% lower in the enzyme containing Cox2W56R than in the one with Cox2WT. Tandem mass spectrometry confirmed that W56 was substituted by R56 in Cox2W56R. In addition, Cox2W56R exhibited the same N-terminus than Cox2WT, indicating that the MTS of Oxa1 and the leader sequence of 15 residues were removed from Cox2W56R during maturation. Thus, Cox2W56R is identical to Cox2WT except for the point mutation W56R. Mitochondrial Cox1 synthesis is strongly reduced in Δcox2 mutants, but the Cox2W56R complemented strain led to full restoration of Cox1 synthesis. We conclude that the cytosol-synthesized Cox2W56R follows a rate-limiting process of import, maturation or assembly that yields lower steady-state levels of CcO. Still, the allotopically-expressed Cox2W56R restores CcO activity and allows mitochondrial Cox1 synthesis to advance at WT levels.  相似文献   

16.
The yeast mitochondrion is shown to contain a pool of copper that is distinct from that associated with the two known mitochondrial cuproenzymes, superoxide dismutase (Sod1) and cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) and the copper-binding CcO assembly proteins Cox11, Cox17, and Sco1. Only a small fraction of mitochondrial copper is associated with these cuproproteins. The bulk of the remainder is localized within the matrix as a soluble, anionic, low molecular weight complex. The identity of the matrix copper ligand is unknown, but the bulk of the matrix copper fraction is not protein-bound. The mitochondrial copper pool is dynamic, responding to changes in the cytosolic copper level. The addition of copper salts to the growth medium leads to an increase in mitochondrial copper, yet the expansion of this matrix pool does not induce any respiration defects. The matrix copper pool is accessible to a heterologous cuproenzyme. Co-localization of human Sod1 and the metallochaperone CCS within the mitochondrial matrix results in suppression of growth defects of sod2Delta cells. However, in the absence of CCS within the matrix, the activation of human Sod1 can be achieved by the addition of copper salts to the growth medium.  相似文献   

17.
Yeast cells deficient in the Rieske iron-sulfur subunit (Rip1) of ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase (bc1) accumulate a late core assembly intermediate, which weakly associates with cytochrome oxidase (CcO) in a respiratory supercomplex. Expression of the N-terminal half of Rip1, which lacks the C-terminal FeS-containing globular domain (designated N-Rip1), results in a marked stabilization of trimeric and tetrameric bc1-CcO supercomplexes. Another bc1 mutant (qcr9Δ) stalled at the same assembly intermediate is likewise converted to stable supercomplex species by the expression of N-Rip1, but not by expression of intact Rip1. The N-Rip1-induced stabilization of bc1-CcO supercomplexes is independent of the Bcs1 translocase, which mediates Rip1 translocation during bc1 biogenesis. N-Rip1 induces the stabilization of bc1-CcO supercomplexes through an enhanced formation of CcO. The association of N-Rip1 with the late core bc1 assembly intermediate appears to confer stabilization of a CcO assembly intermediate. This induced stabilization of CcO is dependent on the Rcf1 supercomplex stabilization factor and only partially dependent on the presence of cardiolipin. N-Rip1 exerts a related induction of CcO stabilization in WT yeast, resulting in enhanced respiration. Additionally, the impact of CcO stabilization on supercomplexes was observed by means other than expression of N-Rip1 (via overexpression of CcO subunits Cox4 and Cox5a), demonstrating that this is a general phenomenon. This study presents the first evidence showing that supercomplexes can be stabilized by the stimulated formation of CcO.  相似文献   

18.
The α proteobacter Rhodobacter sphaeroides accumulates two cytochrome c oxidases (CcO) in its cytoplasmic membrane during aerobic growth: a mitochondrial-like aa(3)-type CcO containing a di-copper Cu(A) center and mono-copper Cu(B), plus a cbb(3)-type CcO that contains Cu(B) but lacks Cu(A). Three copper chaperones are located in the periplasm of R. sphaeroides, PCu(A)C, PrrC (Sco) and Cox11. Cox11 is required to assemble Cu(B) of the aa(3)-type but not the cbb(3)-type CcO. PrrC is homologous to mitochondrial Sco1; Sco proteins are implicated in Cu(A) assembly in mitochondria and bacteria, and with Cu(B) assembly of the cbb(3)-type CcO. PCu(A)C is present in many bacteria, but not mitochondria. PCu(A)C of Thermus thermophilus metallates a Cu(A) center in vitro, but its in vivo function has not been explored. Here, the extent of copper center assembly in the aa(3)- and cbb(3)-type CcOs of R. sphaeroides has been examined in strains lacking PCu(A)C, PrrC, or both. The absence of either chaperone strongly lowers the accumulation of both CcOs in the cells grown in low concentrations of Cu(2+). The absence of PrrC has a greater effect than the absence of PCu(A)C and PCu(A)C appears to function upstream of PrrC. Analysis of purified aa(3)-type CcO shows that PrrC has a greater effect on the assembly of its Cu(A) than does PCu(A)C, and both chaperones have a lesser but significant effect on the assembly of its Cu(B) even though Cox11 is present. Scenarios for the cellular roles of PCu(A)C and PrrC are considered. The results are most consistent with a role for PrrC in the capture and delivery of copper to Cu(A) of the aa(3)-type CcO and to Cu(B) of the cbb(3)-type CcO, while the predominant role of PCu(A)C may be to capture and deliver copper to PrrC and Cox11. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Biogenesis/Assembly of Respiratory Enzyme Complexes.  相似文献   

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20.
Impacts of individual personality on group distribution were investigated using sheep (Ovis aries) as a model. In an indoor exploration test, individuals who visited <4 (out of 6) objects in a novel environment were classified as ‘shy’ (n = 10), and those who visited 5 or 6 objects were classified as ‘bold’ (n = 10). Nine weeks later, using a series of groups (n = 40) of either 5 shy or 5 bold sheep, we measured distribution at pasture and responses to disturbance and the approach of a human handler. When grazing undisturbed, the mean nearest neighbour distance and spread (minimum convex hull area) of shy groups were less than those of bold groups, with shy individuals moving towards one another more often. Shy groups explored a smaller area than bold groups. When disturbed, shy sheep were more likely to stop grazing and move closer together. Shy sheep kept further away from the handler and moved faster when driven. The results demonstrate a link between personality and group distribution, suggesting that our ‘shy’ and ‘bold’ individuals may occupy different positions on the shy-bold continuum documented for other species. We discuss implications for diet composition and impacts on vegetation grazed by animals with different personalities.  相似文献   

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