The authors identified a novel mtDNA mutation (T9176G) in the ATPase 6 gene in a family in which a 10-year-old girl had a severe neurodegenerative disorder, her elder sister had died of Leigh syndrome (LS), and a maternal uncle had a spinocerebellar disorder. Biochemical studies disclosed a reduced rate of ATP synthesis in skin fibroblast cultures from the proposita as the likely explanation of her severe illness. The findings expand the genetic variants associated with LS.
The molecular pathogenic mechanism of the human mitochondrial diseases neurogenic ataxia and retinitis pigmentosa and maternally inherited Leigh syndrome was determined in cultured human cells harboring homoplasmic T8993G/T8993C point mutations in the mitochondrial ATP6 gene, which encodes subunit 6 of the F 1 F 0 -ATP synthase. Immunoprecipitation and blue native electrophoresis showed that F 1 F 0 -ATP synthase assembles correctly in homoplasmic mutant mitochondria. The mutants exhibited a tendency to have an increased sensitivity to subsaturating amounts of oligomycin; this provided further evidence for complete assembly and tight coupling between the F 1 and F 0 sectors. Furthermore, human ATP synthase dimers and higher homo-oligomers were observed for the first time, and it was demonstrated that the mutant enzymes retain enough structural integrity to oligomerize. A reproducible increase in the proportion of oligomeric-to-monomeric enzyme was found for the T8993G mutant suggesting that F 1 F 0 oligomerization is regulated in vivo and that it can be modified in pathological conditions. Despite correct assembly, the T8993G mutation produced a 60% inhibition in ATP synthesis turnover. In vitro denaturing conditions showed F 1 F 0 instability conferred by the mutations, although this instability did not produce enzyme disassembly in the conditions used for determination of ATP synthesis. Taken together, the data show that the primary molecular pathogenic mechanism of these deleterious human mitochondrial mutations is functional inhibition in a correctly assembled ATP synthase. Structural instability may play a role in the progression of the disease under potentially denaturing conditions, as discussed.
We performed comparative biochemical studies in cultured fibroblast mitochondria from patients with the T8993G or the T8993C point mutations in the ATPase 6 gene of mitochondrial DNA. We found that ATP production was much more severely decreased in cells from patients with the T8993G mutation than in those from patients with the T8993C mutation. Kinetic studies suggest that both mutations affect only the F0 sector of the mitochondrial ATPase complex. We conclude that these two mutations, which result in the substitution of different amino acids at the same site of the ATPase, result in an enzyme with different biochemical characteristics.
Mammalian complex V (F1F0-ATP synthase or ATPase) uses the proton gradient to generate ATP during oxidative phosphorylation and requires several helper proteins, including TMEM70, to form the holoenzyme in a stepwise process in which nuclear DNA is combined with mitochondrial DNA-encoded subunits. We report the clinical and molecular findings in three patients presenting lactic acidosis, 3-methylglutaconic aciduria, and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. All three showed an isolated defect of fully assembled ATP synthase in association with a "common" (c.317-2A > G) and a new (c.628A > C/p.T210P) variant in TMEM70. Interestingly, one of the patients also showed nitric oxide-responsive pulmonary arterial hypertension, a finding never before associated with TMEM70 deficiency. In addition to widening the clinical and mutational spectrum of defective ATP synthase, our study also suggests that mutant TMEM70 associates in high molecular weight complexes (470-550 kDa) when expressed in Hela cells and exerts a direct action in ATP synthase biogenesis and assembly, mediating the incorporation of F1 moieties.
Throughout spermatogenesis, mitochondria undergo a morphological and functional differentiation. Mitochondria are involved in the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), considered one of the mediators of ageing. Particularly, lipid peroxidation is regarded as a major phenomenon by which ROS can impair cellular function. In the present study, we examined the production of superoxide anion, superoxide dismutase activity and the effect of Fe(2+)/ascorbate induced-lipid peroxidation on the respiratory chain activities of testis mitochondria throughout the process of spermatogenesis and ageing. Mitochondria from rat testes generated superoxide anion, mainly using NADH as substrate, which increased according to age. The activity of SOD is age-dependent and greatly stimulated during the first wave of spermatogenesis, but decreases in adulthood and old age. TBARS concentration was also markedly increased by ageing. The activity of mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes is differentially affected by oxidative stress induced by iron/ascorbate, succinate-dehydrogenase activity being less vulnerable than that of NADH-dehydrogenase and cytochrome c oxidase. The data suggest that ageing is accompanied by reduced activity of SOD, leading to excessive oxidative stress and enhanced lipid peroxidation that compromises the functionality of the electron transport chain. The data support the concept that mitochondrial function is an important determinant in ageing.
The smallest rotary motor of living cells, F0F1-ATP synthase, couples proton flow-generated by the OXPHOS system-from the intermembrane space back to the matrix with the conversion of ADP to ATP. While all mutations affecting the multisubunit complexes of the OXPHOS system probably impact on the cell's output of ATP, only mutations in complex V can be considered to affect this output directly. So far, most of the F0F1-ATP synthase variations have been detected in the mitochondrial ATPase6 gene. In this study, the four most frequent mutations in the ATPase6 gene, namely L156R, L217R, L156P, and L217P, are studied for the first time together, both in primary cells and in cybrid clones. Arginine ("R") mutations were associated with a much more severe phenotype than Proline ("P") mutations, in terms of both biochemical activity and growth capacity. Also, a threshold effect in both "R" mutations appeared at 50% mutation load. Different mechanisms seemed to emerge for the two "R" mutations: the F1 seemed loosely bound to the membrane in the L156R mutant, whereas the L217R mutant induced low activity of complex V, possibly the result of a reduced rate of proton flow through the A6 channel.
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