C129/U1 is a respiratory defective mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae arrested in cytochrome oxidase assembly due to a mutation in COX17, a nuclear gene encoding a low molecular weight cytoplasmic protein proposed to function in mitochondrial copper recruitment. In the present study we show that the respiratory defect of C129/U1 is rescuable by two multicopy suppressors, SCO1 and SCO2. SCO1 was earlier reported to code for a mitochondrial inner membrane protein with an essential function in cytochrome oxidase assembly (Buchwald, P., Krummeck, G., and Rodel, G. (1991) Mol. Gen. Genet. 229, 413-420). SCO2 is a homologue of SCO1, whose product is also localized in the mitochondrial membrane but is not required for respiration.SCO1 also suppresses a cox17 null mutant, indicating that overexpression of Sco1p can compensate for the absence of Cox17p. In contrast, neither copper, COX17 on a multicopy plasmid, or a combination of the two is able to restore respiration in sco1 mutants. Rescue of cox17 mutants by Sco1p suggests that this mitochondrial protein plays a role either in mitochondrial copper transport or insertion of copper into the active site of cytochrome oxidase. Although SCO2 can also partially restore respiratory growth in the cox17 null mutant, rescue in this case requires addition of copper to the growth medium. SCO2 does not suppress a sco1 null mutant, although it is able to partially rescue a sco1 point mutant. We interpret the ability of SCO2 to restore respiration in cox17, but not in sco1 mutants, to indicate that Sco1p and Sco2p have overlapping but not identical functions.
The COX17 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae codes for a cytoplasmic protein essential for the expression of functional cytochrome oxidase. This protein has been implicated in targeting copper to mitochondria. To determine if Cox17p is present in mammalian cells, a yeast strain carrying a null mutation in COX17 was transformed with a human cDNA expression library. All the respiratory competent clones obtained from the transformations carried a common cDNA sequence with a reading frame predicting a product homologous to yeast Cox17p. The cloning of a mammalian COX17 homolog suggests that the encoded product is likely to function in copper recruitment in eucaryotic cells in general. Its presence in humans provides a possible target for genetically inherited deficiencies in cytochrome oxidase.
The respiratory defect of Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutants assigned to complementation group G4 of a pet strain collection stems from their failure to synthesize cytochrome oxidase. The mutations do not affect expression of either the mitochondrially or nuclearly encoded subunits of the enzyme. The cytochrome oxidase deficiency also does not appear to be related to mitochondrial copper metabolism or heme a biosynthesis. These data suggest that the mutants are likely to be impaired in assembly of the enzyme. A gene designated COX15 has been cloned by transformation of mutants from complementation group G4. This gene is identical to reading frame YER141w on chromosome 5. To facilitate further studies, Cox15p has been expressed as a biotinylated protein. Biotinylated Cox15p fully restores cytochrome oxidase in cox15 mutants, indicating that the carboxylterminal sequence with biotin does not affect its function. Cox15p is a constituent of the mitochondrial inner membrane and, because of its resistance to proteolysis, probably is largely embedded in the phospholipid bilayer of the membrane. The present studies further emphasize the complexity of cytochrome oxidase assembly and report a new constituent of mitochondria involved in this process. The existence of COX15 homologs in Schizosaccharomyces pombe and Caenorhabditis elegans suggests that it may be widely distributed in eucaryotic organisms.The completion of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome sequence (1) has spawned new large scale projects designed to unravel the functions of the numerous unknown reading frames. A substantial fraction of the total information in yeast chromosomal DNA is comprised of PET genes that are essential for the biogenesis of respiratory competent mitochondria. Mutations in these genes were shown in the early 1950s (2, 3) to affect the ability of yeast to respire. Renewed efforts to mutationally saturate for this class of genes (4, 5) have helped to expand our knowledge of the extent and nature of the contribution made by the nucleus toward maintenance of respiring mitochondria.Biochemical studies of pet mutants 1 have revealed that the assembly of respiratory chain enzymes is governed by an unexpectedly large number of genes. For example, some three dozen complementation groups have been reported to consist of mutants displaying a selective deficiency in cytochrome oxidase (4, 6). In addition to mutations in the structural genes, these strains are also affected in: 1) processing of the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase pre-mRNAs (7-9), 2) translation of the resultant mRNAs (10, 11), 3) heme a biosynthesis (12), 4) copper import and transfer to the apoenzyme (13, 14), and 5) as yet poorly understood events in the pathway leading to the functional enzyme (15-17). To learn more about the assembly of this heteroligomeric membrane complex, we have continued to screen for, and to analyze pet mutants with lesions in cytochrome oxidase. In this article, we report the properties of mutants from complementation group G4 whose cytochrome oxidase d...
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.