Single copies of subunits d, oligomycin-sensitivity conferring protein, and b are present in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae mitochondrial ATP synthase. (25/26295)

In the mitochondrial ATP synthase (mtATPase) of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the stoichiometry of subunits d, oligomycin-sensitivity conferring protein (OSCP), and b is poorly defined. We have investigated the stoichiometry of these subunits by the application of hexahistidine affinity purification technology. We have previously demonstrated that intact mtATPase complexes incorporating a Hex6-tagged subunit can be isolated via Ni2+-nitrilotriacetic acid affinity chromatography (Bateson, M., Devenish, R. J., Nagley, P., and Prescott, M. (1996) Anal. Biochem. 238, 14-18). Strains were constructed in which Hex6-tagged versions of subunits d, OSCP, and b were coexpressed with the corresponding wild-type subunit. This coexpression resulted in a mixed population of mtATPase complexes containing untagged wild-type and Hex6-tagged subunits. The stoichiometry of each subunit was then assessed by determining whether or not the untagged wild-type subunit could be recovered from Ni2+-nitrilotriacetic acid purifications as an integral component of those complexes absorbed by virtue of the Hex6-tagged subunit. As only the Hex6-tagged subunit was recovered from such purifications, we demonstrate that the stoichiometry of subunits d, OSCP, and b in yeast is 1 in each case.  (+info)

Contributions of mitochondria to animal physiology: from homeostatic sensor to calcium signalling and cell death. (26/26295)

Over recent years, it has become clear that mitochondria play a central role in many key aspects of animal physiology and pathophysiology. Their central and ubiquitous task is clearly the production of ATP. Nevertheless, they also play subtle roles in glucose homeostasis, acting as the sensor for substrate supply in the transduction pathway that promotes insulin secretion by the pancreatic -cell and that modulates the excitability of the hypothalamic glucose-sensitive neurons involved in appetite control. Mitochondria may also act as sensors of availability of oxygen, the other major mitochondrial substrate, in the regulation of respiration. Mitochondria take up calcium, and the high opacity mitochondrial calcium uptake pathway provides a mechanism that couples energy demand to increased ATP production through the calcium-dependent upregulation of mitochondrial enzyme activity. Mitochondrial calcium accumulation may also have a substantial impact on the spatiotemporal dynamics of cellular calcium signals, with subtle differences of detail in different cell types. Recent work has also revealed the centrality of mitochondrial dysfunction as an irreversible step in the pathway to both necrotic and apoptotic cell death. This review looks at recent developments in these rapidly evolving areas of cell physiology in an attempt to draw together disparate areas of research into a common theme.  (+info)

Carboxyatractyloside increases the effect of oleate on mitochondrial permeability transition. (27/26295)

Addition of a low concentration of carboxyatractyloside (0.075 microM) renders mitochondria susceptible to the opening of the non-specific pore by 5 microM oleate, in a cyclosporin A-sensitive fashion. Matrix Ca2+ efflux as well as collapse of the transmembrane potential reveal permeability transition. The effect of oleate is reached after the titration, by carboxyatractyloside, of 38 pmol of adenine nucleotide translocase per mg mitochondrial protein. We propose that permeability transition may result from an additive action of carboxyatractyloside plus oleate on the ADP/ATP carrier.  (+info)

Monocytic cell necrosis is mediated by potassium depletion and caspase-like proteases. (28/26295)

Apoptosis is a physiological cell death that culminates in mitochondrial permeability transition and the activation of caspases, a family of cysteine proteases. Necrosis, in contrast, is a pathological cell death characterized by swelling of the cytoplasm and mitochondria and rapid plasma membrane disruption. Necrotic cell death has long been opposed to apoptosis, but it now appears that both pathways involve mitochondrial permeability transition, raising the question of what mediates necrotic cell death. In this study, we investigated mechanisms that promote necrosis induced by various stimuli (Clostridium difficile toxins, Staphylococcus aureus alpha toxin, ouabain, nigericin) in THP-1 cells, a human monocytic cell line, and in monocytes. All stimuli induced typical features of necrosis and triggered protease-mediated release of interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) and CD14 in both cell types. K+ depletion was actively implicated in necrosis because substituting K+ for Na+ in the extracellular medium prevented morphological features of necrosis and IL-1beta release. N-benzyloxycarbonyl-Val-Ala-Asp-fluoromethyl ketone, a broad-spectrum caspase inhibitor, prevented morphological features of necrosis, plasma membrane destruction, loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, IL-1beta release, and CD14 shedding induced by all stimuli. Thus, in monocytic cells, necrosis is a cell death pathway mediated by passive K+ efflux and activation of caspase-like proteases.  (+info)

Molecular chaperones: pathways and networks. (29/26295)

Some proteins synthesized by growing eukaryotic cells are transferred along unidirectional pathways of molecular chaperones until the risk of aggregation has decreased and they can be released safely. Mature proteins denatured by stress may instead be handled by chaperones acting in branched, reversible networks.  (+info)

The cyclin-dependent kinase Cdk2 regulates thymocyte apoptosis. (30/26295)

Aberrant activation of cell cycle molecules has been postulated to play a role in apoptosis ("catastrophic cell cycle"). Here we show that in noncycling developing thymocytes, the cyclin- dependent kinase Cdk2 is activated in response to all specific and nonspecific apoptotic stimuli tested, including peptide-specific thymocyte apoptosis. Cdk2 was found to function upstream of the tumor suppressor p53, transactivation of the death promoter Bax, alterations of mitochondrial permeability, Bcl-2, caspase activation, and caspase-dependent proteolytic cleavage of the retinoblastoma protein. Inhibition of Cdk2 completely protected thymocytes from apoptosis, mitochondrial changes, and caspase activation. These data provide the first evidence that Cdk2 activity is crucial for the induction of thymocyte apoptosis.  (+info)

The presence of pseudouridine in the anticodon alters the genetic code: a possible mechanism for assignment of the AAA lysine codon as asparagine in echinoderm mitochondria. (31/26295)

It has been inferred from DNA sequence analyses that in echinoderm mitochondria not only the usual asparagine codons AAU and AAC, but also the usual lysine codon AAA, are translated as asparagine by a single mitochondrial (mt) tRNAAsn with the anticodon GUU. Nucleotide sequencing of starfish mt tRNAAsn revealed that the anticodon is GPsiU, U35 at the anticodon second position being modified to pseudouridine (Psi). In contrast, mt tRNALys, corresponding to another lysine codon, AAG, has the anticodon CUU. mt tRNAs possessing anti-codons closely related to that of tRNAAsn, but responsible for decoding only two codons each-tRNAHis, tRNAAsp and tRNATyr-were found to possess unmodified U35 in all cases, suggesting the importance of Psi35 for decoding the three codons. Therefore, the decoding capabilities of two synthetic Escherichia coli tRNAAla variants with the anticodon GPsiU or GUU were examined using an E.coli in vitro translation system. Both tRNAs could translate not only AAC and AAU with similar efficiency, but also AAA with an efficiency that was approximately 2-fold higher in the case of tRNAAlaGPsiU than tRNAAlaGUU. These findings imply that Psi35 of echinoderm mt tRNAAsn actually serves to decode the unusual asparagine codon AAA, resulting in the alteration of the genetic code in echinoderm mitochondria.  (+info)

Visualization of cyclosporin A and Ca2+-sensitive cyclical mitochondrial depolarizations in cell culture. (32/26295)

Mitochondria not only facilitate chemiosmotic energy transduction, but also are excitable organelles that are important participants in intracellular Ca2+ signaling and are obligate participants in the active cell death cascade known as apoptosis. Underlying these functions is the cyclosporin A (CSA)-sensitive mitochondrial permeability transition pore (MTP), which can open transiently in a low conductance mode (MTPL) to relieve excess Ca2+, and irreversibly during the initiation of apoptosis. Here we image for the first time CSA- and Ca2+-sensitive cyclical mitochondrial depolarizations in cultures of the SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma cell. In addition, we show that mitochondrial transmembrane potential (DeltaPsi) increases in response to CSA, indicating a baseline channel activity. Moreover, networks of mitochondria are shown to behave as an excitable system that may use Ca2+ as a diffusible messenger to recruit neighboring mitochondria to depolarize. We propose that these depolarizations represent MTPL activity. Our data further reinforce the notion that mitochondria are excitable organelles and suggest coordinated activation of MTPL.  (+info)