Supernumerary proteins of the human mitochondrial ribosomal small subunit are integral for assembly and translation

Author:

Hilander TaruORCID,Monteuuis GeoffrayORCID,Awadhpersad Ryan,Broda Krystyna L.,Pohjanpelto MaxORCID,Pyman Elizabeth,Singh Sachin Kumar,Nyman Tuula A.ORCID,Crevel Isabelle,Taylor Robert W.,Saada Ann,Balboa Diego,Battersby Brendan J.ORCID,Jackson Christopher B.ORCID,Carroll Christopher J.ORCID

Abstract

SummaryMitochondrial ribosomes (mitoribosomes) have undergone substantial structural remodelling throughout evolution. Compared to their prokaryotic counterparts, mitoribosomes show a substantial loss of ribosomal RNA, whilst acquiring unique protein subunits located on the periphery of the ribosomal subunit structures. We set out to investigate the functional properties of all 14 unique (mitochondrial-specific or supernumerary) human mitoribosomal proteins in the small subunit. Using genome editing with CRISPR-Cas9, we made knockouts for each subunit in HEK293 cells to study the effect on mitoribosome assembly and function in protein synthesis. Unexpectedly, we show that each supernumerary knockout leads to a unique mitoribosome assembly defect with variable impact on mitochondrial protein synthesis. Our data demonstrates that all supernumerary subunits are essential structural components except mS37. Surprisingly, we found the stability of mS37 was reduced in all our supernumerary knockouts of the small and large ribosomal subunits as well as patient-derived lines with mitoribosome assembly defects. We identified that a redox regulated CX9C motif in mS37 was essential for protein stability, suggesting a potential mechanism to regulate mitochondrial protein synthesis. Together, our findings support a modular assembly of the human mitochondrial small ribosomal subunit mediated by essential supernumerary subunits and identify a redox regulatory role involving mS37 in mitochondrial protein synthesis in health and disease.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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