Abstract

The mechanisms that regulate oxidative phosphorylation in mammalian cells are largely unknown. To address this issue, cybrids were generated by fusing osteosarcoma cells devoid of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) with platelets from a patient with a stop-codon mutation in cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COX I). The molecular and biochemical characteristics of cybrids harboring varying levels of mutated mitochondrial DNA were studied. We found a direct correlation between the levels of mutated COX I DNA and mutated COX I mRNA, whereas the levels of COX I total mRNA were unchanged. COX I polypeptide synthesis and steady-state levels were inversely proportional to mutation levels. Cytochrome c oxidase subunit II was reduced proportionally to COX I, indicating impairment in complex assembly. COX enzymatic activity was inversely proportional to the levels of mutated mtDNA. However, both cell respiration and ATP synthesis were preserved in cells with lower proportions of mutated genomes, with a threshold at approximately 40%, and decreased linearly with increasing mutated mtDNA. These results indicate that COX levels in mutated cells were not regulated at the transcriptional, translational, and post-translational levels. Because of a small excess of COX capacity, the levels of expression of COX subunits exerted a relatively tight control on oxidative phosphorylation.

Highlights

  • The mechanisms that regulate oxidative phosphorylation in mammalian cells are largely unknown

  • To better understand how genetic defects in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA)-coded c oxidase (COX) subunits affect the regulation of OXPHOS in vivo, we have analyzed a set of transmitochondrial cell lines containing various proportions of a G6930A stop-codon mutation in the c oxidase subunit I (COX I) gene [13]

  • The metabolic effects of a stop-codon mutation in the mitochondrial gene coding for COX I were studied in cultured human cells

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Summary

OXPHOS Regulation in Heteroplasmic COX I Mutant Cells

With increasing doses of the COX inhibitor KCN demonstrate that COX capacity is in low excess compared with that required to support normal cell respiration [18, 19]. COX appears to operate a tight regulation on cell respiration in mammalian cells. To better understand how genetic defects in mtDNA-coded COX subunits affect the regulation of OXPHOS in vivo, we have analyzed a set of transmitochondrial cell lines (cybrids) containing various proportions (from 0 to 100%) of a G6930A stop-codon mutation in the COX I gene [13]

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