Publication:
Mitochondrial Protein Synthesis Adapts to Influx of Nuclear-Encoded Protein

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2016

Authors

Richter-Dennerlein, Ricarda
Bareth, Bettina
Schendzielorz, Alexander Benjamin
Wang, Cong
Rehling, Peter
Dennerlein, Sven

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

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.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Collections

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By