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Mitochondrial Protein Synthesis Adapts to Influx of Nuclear-Encoded Protein

Authors :
Ricarda Richter-Dennerlein
Silke Oeljeklaus
Alexander Benjamin Schendzielorz
Bettina Bareth
Sven Dennerlein
Bettina Warscheid
Peter Rehling
Christin Ronsör
Cong Wang
Isotta Lorenzi
Source :
Cell
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Mitochondrial ribosomes translate membrane integral core subunits of the oxidative phosphorylation system encoded by mtDNA. These translation products associate with nuclear-encoded, imported proteins to form enzyme complexes that produce ATP. Here, we show that human mitochondrial ribosomes display translational plasticity to cope with the supply of imported nuclear-encoded subunits. Ribosomes expressing mitochondrial-encoded COX1 mRNA selectively engage with cytochrome c oxidase assembly factors in the inner membrane. Assembly defects of the cytochrome c oxidase arrest mitochondrial translation in a ribosome nascent chain complex with a partially membrane-inserted COX1 translation product. This complex represents a primed state of the translation product that can be retrieved for assembly. These findings establish a mammalian translational plasticity pathway in mitochondria that enables adaptation of mitochondrial protein synthesis to the influx of nuclear-encoded subunits. peerReviewed

Details

ISSN :
10974172
Volume :
167
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2a34d2a5d12e043c80228aa72e1c0a7e