Translation initiation of leaderless and polycistronic transcripts in mammalian mitochondria

Author:

Remes Cristina1,Khawaja Anas23,Pearce Sarah F23,Dinan Adam M4,Gopalakrishna Shreekara23ORCID,Cipullo Miriam23,Kyriakidis Vasileios23,Zhang Jingdian23,Dopico Xaquin Castro5,Yukhnovets Olessya67,Atanassov Ilian8ORCID,Firth Andrew E4,Cooperman Barry1,Rorbach Joanna239ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry, University of Pennsylvania , Philadelphia , PA  19104 , USA

2. Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biophysics, Division of Molecular Metabolism, Karolinska Institutet , Stockholm  17165, Sweden

3. Max Planck Institute Biology of Ageing - Karolinska Institutet Laboratory, Karolinska Institutet , Stockholm , Sweden

4. Department of Pathology, University of Cambridge , Cambridge , UK

5. Department of Microbiology, Tumor & Cell Biology, Karolinska Institutet , Stockholm  171 77, Sweden

6. RWTH Aachen, I. Physikalisches Institut (IA) , Aachen , Germany

7. Forschungszentrum Jülich, Institute of Complex Systems ICS-5 , Jülich, Germany

8. Proteomics Core Facility, Max-Planck-Institute for Biology of Ageing , Joseph-Stelzmann-Str. 9b, 50931  Cologne , Germany

9. STIAS: Stellenbosch Institute for Advanced Study at Stellenbosch University , Marais Rd, Stellenbosch 7600, South Africa

Abstract

Abstract The synthesis of mitochondrial OXPHOS complexes is central to cellular metabolism, yet many molecular details of mitochondrial translation remain elusive. It has been commonly held view that translation initiation in human mitochondria proceeded in a manner similar to bacterial systems, with the mitoribosomal small subunit bound to the initiation factors, mtIF2 and mtIF3, along with initiator tRNA and an mRNA. However, unlike in bacteria, most human mitochondrial mRNAs lack 5′ leader sequences that can mediate small subunit binding, raising the question of how leaderless mRNAs are recognized by mitoribosomes. By using novel in vitro mitochondrial translation initiation assays, alongside biochemical and genetic characterization of cellular knockouts of mitochondrial translation factors, we describe unique features of translation initiation in human mitochondria. We show that in vitro, leaderless mRNA transcripts can be loaded directly onto assembled 55S mitoribosomes, but not onto the mitoribosomal small subunit (28S), in a manner that requires initiator fMet-tRNAMet binding. In addition, we demonstrate that in human cells and in vitro, mtIF3 activity is not required for translation of leaderless mitochondrial transcripts but is essential for translation of ATP6 in the case of the bicistronic ATP8/ATP6 transcript. Furthermore, we show that mtIF2 is indispensable for mitochondrial protein synthesis. Our results demonstrate an important evolutionary divergence of the mitochondrial translation system and further our fundamental understanding of a process central to eukaryotic metabolism.

Funder

Karolinska Institutet

Marie Sklodowska Curie Actions International Career Grant

Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation

Wellcome Trust

European Research Council

NIH

International Helmholtz Research School of Biophysics and Soft Matter

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

Reference51 articles.

1. Human mitoribosome biogenesis and its emerging links to disease;Lopez Sanchez;Int. J. Mol. Sci.,2021

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3. The structure of the human mitochondrial ribosome;Amunts;Science,2015

4. The complete structure of the large subunit of the mammalian mitochondrial ribosome;Greber,2014

5. The complete structure of the 55S mammalian mitochondrial ribosome;Greber;Science,2015

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