Defective mitochondrial COX1 translation due to loss of COX14 function triggers ROS-induced inflammation in mouse liver

Author:

Aich AbhishekORCID,Boshnakovska AngelaORCID,Witte Steffen,Gall Tanja,Unthan-Fechner Kerstin,Yousefi Roya,Chowdhury ArpitaORCID,Dahal Drishan,Methi Aditi,Kaufmann Svenja,Silbern IvanORCID,Prochazka JanORCID,Nichtova ZuzanaORCID,Palkova Marcela,Raishbrook Miles,Koubkova GizelaORCID,Sedlacek RadislavORCID,Tröder Simon E.ORCID,Zevnik Branko,Riedel DietmarORCID,Michanski Susann,Möbius WiebkeORCID,Ströbel Philipp,Lüchtenborg Christian,Giavalisco PatrickORCID,Urlaub HenningORCID,Fischer Andre,Brügger BrittaORCID,Jakobs StefanORCID,Rehling PeterORCID

Abstract

AbstractMitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) fuels cellular ATP demands. OXPHOS defects lead to severe human disorders with unexplained tissue specific pathologies. Mitochondrial gene expression is essential for OXPHOS biogenesis since core subunits of the complexes are mitochondrial-encoded. COX14 is required for translation of COX1, the central mitochondrial-encoded subunit of complex IV. Here we describe a COX14 mutant mouse corresponding to a patient with complex IV deficiency. COX14M19I mice display broad tissue-specific pathologies. A hallmark phenotype is severe liver inflammation linked to release of mitochondrial RNA into the cytosol sensed by RIG-1 pathway. We find that mitochondrial RNA release is triggered by increased reactive oxygen species production in the deficiency of complex IV. Additionally, we describe a COA3Y72C mouse, affected in an assembly factor that cooperates with COX14 in early COX1 biogenesis, which displays a similar yet milder inflammatory phenotype. Our study provides insight into a link between defective mitochondrial gene expression and tissue-specific inflammation.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Max-Planck-Gesellschaft

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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