| Literature DB >> 20396601 |
Paulien Smits1, Jan Smeitink, Lambert van den Heuvel.
Abstract
Mitochondrial disorders are a heterogeneous group of often multisystemic and early fatal diseases, which are amongst the most common inherited human diseases. These disorders are caused by defects in the oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) system, which comprises five multisubunit enzyme complexes encoded by both the nuclear and the mitochondrial genomes. Due to the multitude of proteins and intricacy of the processes required for a properly functioning OXPHOS system, identifying the genetic defect that underlies an OXPHOS deficiency is not an easy task, especially in the case of combined OXPHOS defects. In the present communication we give an extensive overview of the proteins and processes (in)directly involved in mitochondrial translation and the biogenesis of the OXPHOS system and their roles in combined OXPHOS deficiencies. This knowledge is important for further research into the genetic causes, with the ultimate goal to effectively prevent and cure these complex and often devastating disorders.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20396601 PMCID: PMC2854570 DOI: 10.1155/2010/737385
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Biotechnol ISSN: 1110-7243
Figure 1Schematic overview of the processes involved in mitochondrial translation and the biogenesis of the OXPHOS system. Before translation can take place in the mitochondrion, the mtDNA needs to be maintained, replicated and transcribed and numerous nDNA-encoded proteins have to be imported into the mitochondrion for these processes and for mitochondrial translation itself (see Figure 2 for more details on mitochondrial translation and its components depicted here). For the formation of the OXPHOS system, the nDNA- and mtDNA-encoded subunits need to be synthesized, imported, inserted into the inner membrane and assembled into enzyme complexes. The 13 mRNAs depicted refer to 9 monocistronic and 2 dicistronic transcripts. Proteins implicated in mitochondrial disorders are mentioned in brackets (also see Table 1). CI–CV = complex I–V of the OXPHOS system; TIM and TOM = translocase of the inner and outer mitochondrial membranes.
Figure 2Diagram of human mitochondrial protein synthesis. The three phases of mitochondrial translation—initiation, elongation and termination—and all translation factors involved are represented in this figure. See Section 3.2 in the text for a detailed description of all steps (numbered in boxes) of the mitochondrial translation process. Initiation, elongation and termination factors are represented by green, purple and red ovals, respectively. GTP and GDP are shown in yellow and beige circles, respectively.
Genes involved in the biogenesis or maintenance of multiple OXPHOS complexes and implicated in mitochondrial disorders.
| Affected process | Gene | Protein (function) | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| MtDNA replication | POLG | Polymerase | [ |
| POLG2 | Polymerase | [ | |
| C10orf2 | Twinkle (mtDNA helicase) | [ | |
| Nucleotide synthesis and transport | DGUOK | Deoxyguanosine kinase | [ |
| TK2 | Thymidine kinase 2 | [ | |
| TYMP | Endothelial cell growth factor 1 (thymidine phosphorylase) | [ | |
| SLC25A4 | Adenine nucleotide translocator 1 | [ | |
| SLC25A3 | Solute carrier family 25 member 3 (phosphate transporter) | [ | |
| SUCLG1 | Succinate-CoA ligase | [ | |
| SUCLA2 | Succinate-CoA ligase | [ | |
| RRM2B | Ribonucleotide reductase M2 B | [ | |
| MPV17 | Mt inner membrane protein | [ | |
| Mt translation | 22 mitochondrial tRNA genes | [ | |
| 2 mitochondrial rRNA genes | [ | ||
| GFM1 | Mt translation elongation factor G1 | [ | |
| TSFM | Mt translation elongation factor Ts | [ | |
| TUFM | Mt translation elongation factor Tu | [ | |
| MRPS16 | Mt ribosomal protein S16 | [ | |
| MRPS22 | Mt ribosomal protein S22 | [ | |
| PUS1 | Pseudouridine synthase 1 | [ | |
| TRMU | tRNA 5-methylaminomethyl-2-thiouridylate methyltransferase | [ | |
| DARS2 | Mt aspartyl-tRNA synthetase 2 | [ | |
| RARS2 | Mt arginyl-tRNA synthetase 2 | [ | |
| Mt protein import | TIMM8A | Translocase of inner mt membrane 8 homolog A (small TIM complex subunit) | [ |
| DNAJC19 | DnaJ homolog, subfamily C, member 19 (TIM23 complex subunit) | [ | |
| Mt membrane biogenesis and maintenance | TAZ | Tafazzin (cardiolipin metabolism) | [ |
| OPA1 | Optic atrophy 1 (mt fusion) | [ | |
| MFN2 | Mitofusin 2 (mt fusion) | [ | |
| DNM1L | Dynamin 1-like (mt and peroxisomal fission) | [ | |
| Mt protein processing and quality control | SPG7 | Spastic paraplegia 7 or paraplegin (m-AAA protease subunit) | [ |
aBased on the function of the affected proteins, a combined complex I, III, IV and V deficiency would be expected, however, not always do all these enzyme complexes display decreased activities.
bAll OXPHOS complexes are expected to malfunction based on the function of the affected proteins; nonetheless, large variations have been found in the exact OXPHOS complexes involved.
cThe OXPHOS complexes showed normal activities.