| Literature DB >> 19751518 |
Sandra Merz1, Benedikt Westermann.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The mitochondrial respiratory chain produces metabolic energy by oxidative phosphorylation. Biogenesis of the respiratory chain requires the coordinated expression of two genomes: the nuclear genome encoding the vast majority of mitochondrial proteins, and the mitochondrial genome encoding a handful of mitochondrial proteins. The understanding of the molecular processes contributing to respiratory chain assembly and maintenance requires the systematic identification and functional analysis of the genes involved.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19751518 PMCID: PMC2768984 DOI: 10.1186/gb-2009-10-9-r95
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol ISSN: 1474-7596 Impact factor: 13.583
Figure 1Nuclear pet genes of S. cerevisiae. (a) The numbers of pet mutants identified in three screens of the yeast deletion library are indicated. References: Dimmer et al. [14], Luban et al. [17]. (b) The intracellular location of proteins encoded by pet genes has been grouped according to their frequency of occurrence in screens of the deletion library. The graph is a summary of data contained in Additional data file 3. (c) Cellular functions of proteins encoded by highly penetrant pet genes. Functions have been assigned according to data from the Saccharomyces Genome Database [19] and manual annotation. Red indicates mitochondrial proteins, green known extra-mitochondrial proteins, grey unknown proteins, and white dubious ORFs overlapping with known protein-coding genes.
Figure 2Summary of the systematic functional analysis of 319 pet mutants isolated from the MATα yeast deletion library. Grey boxes indicate groups of mutants that were further analyzed, black boxes indicate the final level of resolution of functional analysis. See text for details.
Figure 3Classes of pet mutants. The left column indicates genotypes of haploid pet mutant strains taken from the deletion library carrying a deletion in the nuclear genome (Δyfg1, 'your favourite gene 1') and either no mtDNA ([rho0]; alternatively these strains might be [rho-]) or a wild type-like mitochondrial genome ([rho+]; labeled in red). The middle column indicates genotypes of heterozygous diploid strains after mating with Δmip1. The right column indicates genotypes of haploid deletion mutants after having received [rho+] mitochondria from a donor strain by cytoduction. Respiratory-competent mitochondria are labeled in red, and respiratory-competent yeast cells are depicted on a red background. Class I mutants contain either [rho+] or [rho0] or [rho-] mitochondria after cytoduction. See text for details.
Classes of pet mutants
| I | - | - | Genes essential for maintenance of mtDNA (16 mutants); or genes essential for respiration with gradual loss of mtDNA (102 mutants) |
| II | + | + | Additional effects of extra-genomic factors and/or acquired mitochondrial damage (23 mutants) |
| III | + | - | Genes essential for respiration but not for maintenance of mtDNA (134 mutants) |
| IV | - | + | Genes dispensable for respiration, gradual loss of mtDNA (44 mutants) |
Genes essential for maintenance of mtDNA
| | Involved in repair of DNA damage; located in nucleus and mitochondria | |
| | Aconitase; also independently required for mtDNA maintenance | |
| | DNA helicase; active in nucleus and mitochondria | |
| | Mitochondrial inner membrane localized DNA helicase | |
| | Catalytic subunit of the mitochondrial DNA polymerase | |
| | Mitochondrial ribosomal protein | |
| | Mitochondrial asparaginyl-tRNA synthetase | |
| | Mitochondrial ribosomal protein of the small subunit | |
| | Associates with mitochondrial ribosome; possible role in ribosome assembly | |
| | Dubious ORF; partially overlaps with | |
| | Mitochondrial RNA polymerase specificity factor | |
| | Specifically facilitates the assembly of cytochrome | |
| | Subunit b of the stator stalk of mitochondrial F1F0 ATP synthase | |
| | Required for the ubiquitination activity of the anaphase promoting complex | |
| | Unknown function | |
| | Mitochondrial GTPase involved in fusion |
The list indicates systematic and standard names of genes essential for maintenance of newly re-introduced mtDNA in class I pet mutants. The cellular roles of the proteins are indicated according to the Saccharomyces Genome Database [19] or manually annotated. Genes that were previously not known to be essential for maintenance of mtDNA are indicated with an asterisk.
Genes essential for mitochondrial translation
| | Class II abasic (AP) endonuclease involved in repair of DNA damage | |
| | Transmembrane GTPase required for mitochondrial fusion | |
| | Mitochondrial protein involved in mRNA splicing and protein synthesis | |
| | Mitochondrial RNA helicase, required for splicing of group II introns | |
| | Involved in repair, recombination and maintenance of mitochondrial DNA | |
| | Iron permease that mediates high-affinity iron uptake | |
| | Component of the mitochondrial protein export machinery | |
| | Transcription factor regulates genes involved in iron uptake and cell size | |
| | Mitochondrial peptide chain release factor | |
| | Met-tRNA synthetase, mitochondrial | |
| | Mitochondrial splicing factor | |
| | tRNA synthetase, may be involved in mitochondrial function | |
| | Mitochondrial ribosome recycling factor | |
| | Cytochrome | |
| | Arginyl-tRNA synthetase of mitochondria | |
| | Involved in mitochondrial DNA repair | |
| | Mitochondrial translation elongation factor | |
| | Required for | |
| | Mitochondrial genome maintenance protein | |
| | ATP synthase subunit d | |
| | Mitochondrial intermediate peptidase | |
| | Mitochondrial threonyl tRNA synthase | |
| | Specific translational activator for the | |
| | Mitochondrial translation elongation factor G | |
| | Xylitol dehydrogenase | |
| | Protein involved in mitochondrial metabolism | |
| | ATP synthase subunit h | |
| | Required for accumulation of transcript of | |
| | Involved in proteolytic and chaperone activities in the inner membrane | |
| | Likely functions in assembly of the large ribosomal subunit | |
| | Required for the stability of | |
| | Inorganic pyrophosphatase, mitochondrial | |
| | RNase, associates with the ribosome, turnover of aberrant RNAs | |
| | Lysyl-tRNA synthetase, mitochondrial | |
| | Glutamyl-tRNA synthetase, mitochondrial | |
| | Cytochrome c1 | |
| | Translation elongation factor Tu, mitochondrial | |
| | Tyrosyl-tRNA synthetase, mitochondrial | |
| | Aspartyl-tRNA synthetase, mitochondrial | |
| | Activates mitochondrial acyl carrier protein | |
| | Component of the ADA complex | |
| | Epsilon subunit of F1-ATP synthase | |
| | Unknown function, protein is detected in highly purified mitochondria | |
| | Dubious ORF, overlaps with | |
| | Unknown function, protein is detected in highly purified mitochondria | |
| | Unknown function, protein is detected in highly purified mitochondria | |
| | Unknown function, protein is detected in highly purified mitochondria | |
| | Dubious ORF unlikely to encode a protein | |
| | Unknown function, GFP-tagged protein in mitochondria |
The list indicates systematic and standard names of genes required for protein translation activity in class I and III pet mutants. The cellular roles of the proteins are indicated according to the Saccharomyces Genome Database (SGD) [19] or manually annotated. The list of genes has been matched to entries in SGD (biological process term: translation and cellular component term: mitochondrion). Genes that were previously not known to be required for mitochondrial translation are indicated with an asterisk.
Figure 4Mitochondrial protein synthesis in pet mutants showing an altered translation pattern. Yeast strains were grown in raffinose-containing minimal medium to logarithmic growth phase, cytosolic translation was stopped by the addition of cycloheximide, and newly synthesized mitochondrial proteins were labeled by the addition of 35S methionine. After an incubation of 30 minutes at 30°C, labeling of mitochondrial proteins was stopped by the addition of cold methionine and chloramphenicol, and cell extracts were analyzed by SDS-PAGE, transfer of proteins to nitrocellulose and autoradiography. All mutants have been analyzed in at least three independent experiments. The samples shown here have all been analyzed on the same gel (one lane has been spliced out as indicated by the thin line between lanes 3 and 4). For each strain the same amount of total cellular protein has been loaded per lane. Mutants that were previously not known to be affected in the synthesis of specific mitochondria-encoded proteins are in bold letters. Alterations of the translation pattern mentioned in the text are marked with asterisks. Black asterisks mark bands that are absent, and the white asterisk marks an additional band present in Δcyc3. WT, wild type.
Genes required for expression of specific mitochondrial translation products
| Cytochrome | ||
| Mitochondrial translational activator of the | ||
| Subunit D of the vacuolar H+-ATPase (V-ATPase) | ||
| Binds to the 5' untranslated region of the | ||
| Required for the splicing of two mitochondrial group I introns | ||
| Protein of unknown function | ||
| Required for translation of | ||
| Likely involved in translation of the mitochondrial | ||
| Mitochondrial translational activator specific for the | ||
| Component of a mitochondrial ubiquinone-synthesizing complex |
The list indicates systematic and standard names of genes required for synthesis of only a subset of mitochondria-encoded proteins. The cellular roles of the proteins are indicated according to the Saccharomyces Genome Database [19] or manually annotated. Genes that were previously not known to be required for expression of specific mitochondrial translation products are highlighted with an asterisk.
Figure 5Acquired phenotypes of COX assembly mutants. (a) Quantification of mtDNA. Yeast strains were grown overnight in liquid glucose-containing medium. Total DNA was isolated and the copy number of the mitochondrial COX3 gene was related to that of the nuclear GAL4 gene by RT-PCR and calculation of the 2-ΔΔT value. Error bars indicate standard deviations of triplicate PCR reactions. (b) Complementation test. Δcox10, Δcox16, Δcox19, and Δmss2 strains taken from the MATα yeast deletion library have been transformed with single copy plasmids carrying the respective complementing wild-type alleles under control of their endogenous promoters. Wild-type cells (WT) were transformed with an empty vector. Young cells were grown on complete medium at 30°C overnight before transformation (light bars). Aged cells were incubated on complete medium at room temperature for 14 to 28 days before they were transferred to fresh plates, grown at 30°C overnight, and transformed with complementing plasmids (dark bars). Three days after transformation, colonies were replicated on plates containing fermentable or non-fermentable carbon sources, and the percentage of respiratory-deficient transformants was determined. Error bars indicate standard deviations of three independent experiments. (c) ROS accumulation. Yeast strains were grown for the indicated time periods in liquid glucose-containing medium (YPD), stained by the addition of DHR and analyzed by differential interference microscopy (left panels) and fluorescence microscopy (right panels). All fluorescent micrographs were taken with identical camera settings.
Functional properties of newly described RRG genes
| [ | - | - | Altered | Absent | ||
| [ | - | - | Altered | Absent | ||
| [ | + | - | WT | WT | ||
| Unknown | - | - | WT | WT | ||
| [ | - | - | Absent | Absent | ||
| [ | - | - | Altered | Absent | ||
| [ | + | + | ND | ND | ||
| [ | - | - | Altered | Absent | ||
| [ | - | - | Altered | WT | ||
| [ | + | - | WT | Altered |
References refer to published evidence of mitochondrial localization of Rrg proteins; + indicates rescue by mating with Δmip1 or cytoduction, respectively. WT, wild type-like; ND, not determined. See text for details.