Abstract

Most disease-causing missense mutations in short-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (SCAD) and medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase are thought to compromise the mitochondrial folding and/or stability of the mutant proteins. To address this question, we studied the biogenesis of SCAD proteins in COS-7 cells transfected with cDNA corresponding to two SCAD missense mutations, R22W (identified in a patient with SCAD deficiency) or R22C (homologous to a disease-associated R28C mutation in medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency). After cultivation at 37 degreesC the steady-state amounts of SCAD antigen and activity in extracts from cells transfected with mutant SCAD cDNAs were negligible compared with those of cells transfected with SCAD wild type cDNA, documenting the deleterious effect of the two mutations. Analysis of metabolically labeled and immunoprecipitated SCAD wild type and mutant proteins showed that the two mutant proteins were synthesized as the 44-kDa precursor form, imported into mitochondria and processed to the mature 41.7-kDa form in a normal fashion. However, the intramitochondrial level of matured mutant SCAD proteins decreased rapidly to very low levels, indicating a rapid degradation of the mutant proteins at 37 degreesC. A rapid initial elimination phase was also observed following cultivation at 26 degreesC; however, significantly higher amounts of metabolically labeled and immunoprecipitated mature mutant SCAD proteins remained detectable. This corresponds well with the appreciable steady-state levels of SCAD mutant enzyme activity observed at 26 degreesC. In addition, confocal laser scanning microscopy of immunostained cells showed that the SCAD mutant proteins were localized intramitochondrially. Together, these results show that newly synthesized SCAD R22W and R22C mutant proteins are imported and processed in the mitochondrial matrix, but that a fraction of the proteins is rapidly eliminated by a temperature-dependent degradation mechanism. Thermal stability profiles of wild type and mutant enzymes revealed no difference between the two mutants and the wild type protein. Furthermore, the turnover of the SCAD mutant enzymes in intact cells was comparable to that of the wild type, indicating that the rapid degradation of the mutant SCAD proteins is not due to lability of the correctly folded tetrameric structure but rather to elimination of partly folded or misfolded proteins along the folding pathway.

Highlights

  • The rapid degradation of the mutant short-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (SCAD) proteins is not due to lability of the correctly folded tetrameric structure but rather to elimination of partly folded or misfolded proteins along the folding pathway

  • Using such a system we have shown that the SCAD R22W enzyme activity is undetectable at steady state [40], whereas medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD) R28C displayed activity levels from 50 to 100% of MCAD wild type (WT) [14, 15]

  • Influence of Temperature on Yield of Active SCAD Mutant Enzymes—We have previously shown that the SCAD R22W protein and enzyme activity in transfected COS-7 cells are undetectable at steady state [15]

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Summary

Introduction

The rapid degradation of the mutant SCAD proteins is not due to lability of the correctly folded tetrameric structure but rather to elimination of partly folded or misfolded proteins along the folding pathway. As a first approach to define the protein quality control system involved we have studied the synthesis, intracellular processing, localization, residual enzyme activity, thermal stability profiles, and site of degradation of the protein variants SCAD R22W and SCAD R22C in transfected COS-7 cells cultivated at different temperatures.

Results
Conclusion

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